Gilead's
next step on coronavirus: inhaled remdesivir, other
easier-to-use versions
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[June 02, 2020]
By Deena Beasley
(Reuters) - Gilead Sciences Inc is
developing easier-to-administer versions of its antiviral treatment
remdesivir for COVID-19 that could be used outside of hospitals,
including ones that can be inhaled, after trials showed moderate
effectiveness for the drug given by infusion.
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Remdesivir is the only drug so far that has been shown to help
patients with COVID-19, but Gilead and other companies are looking
for ways to make it work better.
For critically ill patients, Roche and Eli Lilly and Co are testing
drugs in combination with remdesivir.
Gilead is also seeking to treat the virus earlier. Other antivirals,
like influenza pill Tamiflu, work best when given as early as
possible after someone becomes infected.
Gilead in a statement on Monday said it is looking at ways to use
remdesivir earlier in the course of disease, including via alternate
formulations. The company confirmed in an email that it is
researching an inhaled version, but declined further comment.

Company executives such as Chief Medical Officer Merdad Parsey and
Chief Financial Officer Andrew Dickinson have been doing interviews
with Wall Street analysts in recent weeks to discuss the plans,
which are in early stages.
They have said that in the longer term, the company is exploring a
subcutaneous injection formulation of remdesivir, as well as dry
powder versions to be inhaled. Remdesivir cannot be given as a pill
because it has a chemical makeup that would degrade in the liver,
and the intravenous (IV) formulation is only used by hospitals.
In the short term, Gilead is studying how its existing IV
formulation of remdesivir can be diluted for use with a nebulizer -
a drug delivery device used to administer medication in the form of
a mist inhaled into the lungs.
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The idea is that a nebulizer would make remdesivir more directly available to
upper airway and lung tissue as the coronavirus is known to attack the lungs. It
would also allow for early treatment of coronavirus patients who are not
hospitalized.
"People look forward to an inhaled formulation in time," but development is in
the very early stages, said Jefferies analyst Michael Yee, adding that demand
may be limited as many people infected with the virus require minimal treatment.
He said Gilead is building up its capacity to supply remdesivir and has begun
talking to governments around the world about commercial pricing.
Gilead on Monday reported trial results showing that IV remdesivir provided a
modest benefit for hospitalized patients with moderate COVID-19 compared to
standard care.
(The lifeline pipeline, COVID-19 treatments, vaccines in development,
https://graphics.reuters.com/
HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS/
yxmvjqywprz/index.html)
(Reporting By Deena Beasley, editing by Peter Henderson and Bill Berkrot)
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