Japan's Fujifilm to halt enrollment in Avigan trial for COVID-19
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[March 11, 2022]
TOKYO (Reuters) - A drug
once hailed as Japan's biggest contribution in the global fight against
COVID-19 suffered another setback on Friday, as Fujifilm Holdings Corp
said it was halting enrolment in a clinical trial of the pill, Avigan.
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The emergence of the Omicron variant of coronavirus, which usually
causes milder infections, made it tough to determine the drug's
effectiveness in preventing severe symptoms, the company said in a
statement.
Clinical data from patients already enrolled in the trial will
continue to be analysed, it said.
In the first few months of the pandemic, Japan ordered Fujifilm to
triple national stockpiles of the drug, which had originally been
approved as an emergency flu treatment.
Former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said he hoped Avigan would be
approved in May 2020 for COVID-19, and he pledged donate supplies to
needy countries.
Known generically as favipiravir, the drug was eventually approved
in India and Russia, based on early studies showing it eased the
symptoms of COVID-19 and cut hospital stays.
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But studies in Japan have been inconclusive,
leading domestic regulators to hold off approval
for it, partly because animal study data showed
it could lead to birth defects.
As Avigan stumbled in clinical trials, other
antiviral pills have come to the fore against
COVID-19. Japan has bought millions of doses of
oral treatments developed by Pfizer Inc and
Merck & Co.
A third option, developed by domestic firm
Shionogi & Co Ltd, was submitted for regulatory
approval last month.
(Reporting by Rocky Swift; Editing by David
Dolan and Clarence Fernandez)
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