Steroids cut COVID-19 death risk; hepatitis C drugs may help fight the
coronavirus
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[September 03, 2020]
By Nancy Lapid
(Reuters) - The following is a roundup of
some of the latest scientific studies on the novel coronavirus and
efforts to find treatments and vaccines for COVID-19, the illness caused
by the virus.
Steroids reduce death risk from severe COVID-19
Treating critically ill COVID-19 patients with corticosteroid drugs
reduces the risk of death by 20% regardless of which steroid is used,
according to an analysis of seven international trials published on
Wednesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The
analysis, which pooled data from separate trials of low dose
hydrocortisone, dexamethasone and methylprednisolone, found that they
improve survival of COVID-19 patients in intensive care units. "This is
equivalent to around 68% of (these) patients surviving after treatment
with corticosteroids, compared to around 60% surviving in the absence of
corticosteroids," the researchers said in a statement. The findings
prompted the World Health Organization (WHO) to update its treatment
advice to include a "strong recommendation" for steroid use in patients
with severe COVID-19. The evidence shows that if you give
corticosteroids, there are 87 fewer deaths per 1,000 patients, said WHO
representative Janet Diaz. "Impressive as these results are, this is not
a cure," said Anthony Gordon of Imperial College London, who also worked
on the analysis. "So it's vital that we keep up all the prevention
strategies."
Hepatitis C drugs show promise against the coronavirus
Antiviral drugs developed to the treat hepatitis C may also be effective
against the coronavirus, a new report suggests. Researchers examined
more than 6,000 drugs with a history of safe use in humans to see if any
of them could block an important protein in the life cycle of the virus
called the main protease. "The most potent of these were approved drugs
for treating hepatitis C," study leader Brian Kraemer of the University
of Washington School of Medicine told Reuters. He singled out boceprevir
and narlaprevir, protease inhibitors developed by Merck & Co that have
been superceded by more effective hepatitis C treatments. If the effects
of these drugs against the novel coronavirus are confirmed in clinical
trials, they would likely be given as part of a combination therapy to
employ more than one line of attack against the virus, researchers said.
The advantage of finding potent treatments among approved drugs is that
they "can be advanced rapidly to clinical trials without extensive
multi-year preclinical development efforts," the researchers said in
their report, posted on bioRxiv ahead of peer review.
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A pharmacist displays an ampoule of Dexamethasone at the Erasme
Hospital amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in
Brussels, Belgium, June 16, 2020. REUTERS/Yves Herman
Test for virus and antibodies together, researchers say
COVID-19 can be more accurately diagnosed by simultaneously looking
for the virus and its antibodies, according to UK doctors who have
piloted this approach. Traditionally, COVID-19 is diagnosed if tests
show genetic material from the virus, called RNA, on swabs taken
from the nose and throat. But RNA levels on swabs decline after five
days of infection. Therefore, the researchers also look for
antibodies, which generally appear after RNA levels start falling.
In a small trial, this approach "significantly improved" the
diagnosis of COVID-19, researchers reported on Tuesday in Cell
Reports Medicine. They used the Simple Amplification-based assay II,
or SAMBA II, to look for RNA, and a combination of two finger prick
tests to look for antibodies against the coronavirus spike protein.
RNA results were available within hours and antibody results in
minutes. The RNA tests identified 80% of COVID-19 patients, but when
combined with the rapid antibody tests, 100% were correctly
identified, researchers reported. The combination "results in very
high sensitivity for COVID-19 diagnosis with very high specificity,"
the researchers said, meaning few false positives or false
negatives. Combining these point-of-care tests "could be a
game-changer ... particularly in the event of a second wave arising
during flu season, when it will not be immediately clear whether the
patients' had COVID-19 or seasonal flu," coauthor Ravi Gupta from
University of Cambridge said in a statement.
High-rise plumbing may be route of coronavirus spread
COVID-19 may spread through high-rise apartment buildings via
plumbing pipes, new reports suggest. Researchers on Tuesday in
Annals of Internal Medicine said coronavirus in fecal matter flushed
by an ill resident may have spread upward via aerosols in the
drainage pipe system in a building in Guangzhou, China, causing
COVID-19 infections in three families living on higher floors. Last
month, in the Environment International journal, a separate team
reported data indicating possible aerosol transmission of the novel
coronavirus through rising vapors in high-rise plumbing in China.
Neither report proves that transmission through plumbing caused
infections. Still, they suggest ways to prevent the possibility,
such as adequate hygiene and bathroom ventilation. In particular, to
block fecal aerosol transmission through plumbing pipes, U-shaped
water drainage traps under sinks, tubs and showers should not be
allowed to dry out, the authors of the Annals paper advise.
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid and Kate Kelland; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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