Although patients given the drug early in the trial showed more
improvement than those who got delayed doses, the results did not
reach statistical significance, Fujita Health University researcher
Yohei Doi said.
The results, announced at a news conference on Friday, followed the
completion of a clinical trial conducted between March and May on 89
patients across Japan.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had said he hoped the drug would
be approved as a COVID-19 treatment in May, but a shortage of
patients in Japan delayed the progress of clinical trials. It has
been approved as a COVID-19 treatment in Russia and India.
[nL4N2E10MP]
Known generically as favipiravir, Avigan was developed by a
subsidiary of Fujifilm and it was approved in Japan as an emergency
influenza treatment in 2014.
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Interest in the drug soared in March after a Chinese official said it appeared
to help patients recover from COVID-19. It is now the subject of at least 25
clinical trials around the world.
The Japanese government called on Fujifilm to triple national stockpiles of the
drug and pledged to give it away to countries asking for it. [nL1N2BT00K]
[nL4N2CP2JQ]
Concerns remain about the drug as it has been shown to cause birth defects in
animal studies.
(Reporting by Rocky Swift; Editing by Chris Gallagher and Chang-Ran Kim)
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