The study tested three different doses of LY-CoV555, a manufactured
antibody designed to recognize and lock onto the novel coronavirus,
preventing the infection from spreading.
Of the total 302 patients treated with three different doses of
LY-CoV555, five of them, or 1.7%, had to be admitted to a hospital
or visit a hospital emergency room. That compares with a rate of 6%,
or 9 out of 150, for trial patients given a placebo, the company
said.
Only the middle dose, 2,800 milligrams, achieved the trial's main
goal of reducing the amount of virus detected in patients compared
to a placebo 11 days after treatment, it added.
No drug-related serious adverse events were reported and there have
been no trial deaths.
Lilly said it expects to publish the results of the interim analysis
in a peer-reviewed journal and discuss appropriate next steps with
global regulators.
The company said most hospitalizations occurred in patients with
underlying risk factors such as being elderly or obese, suggesting a
more pronounced treatment effect for people in these higher-risk
groups.
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"The results reinforce our conviction that neutralizing antibodies can help in
the fight against COVID-19," Daniel Skovronsky, Lilly's chief scientific
officer, said in a statement.
The company said the trial was ongoing and has now enrolled 800 patients with
mild-to-moderate COVID-19. The trial is also studying LY-CoV555 in combination
with a second Lilly antibody, LY-CoV016, which binds a different area of the
coronavirus' spike protein.
The antibodies, which are given by intravenous infusion, are also being tested
for preventing COVID-19 in residents and staff at long-term care facilities and
for treating patients already hospitalized due to COVID-19.
(Reporting by Deena Beasley; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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