WHO 'strongly advises against' use of two COVID treatments
		
		 
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		 [September 17, 2022] 
		 
		 
		By Natalie Grover 
		 
		LONDON (Reuters) - Two COVID-19 antibody therapies are no longer 
		recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), on the basis that 
		Omicron and the variant's latest offshoots have likely rendered them 
		obsolete. 
		 
		The two therapies - which are designed to work by binding to the spike 
		protein of SARS-CoV-2 to neutralise the virus' ability to infect cells - 
		were some of the first medicines developed early in the pandemic. 
		 
		The virus has since evolved, and mounting evidence from lab tests 
		suggests the two therapies - sotrovimab as well as casirivimab-imdevimab 
		- have limited clinical activity against the latest iterations of the 
		virus. As a result, they have also fallen out of favour with the U.S. 
		health regulator. 
		 
		On Thursday, WHO experts said they strongly advised against the use of 
		the two therapies in patients with COVID-19, reversing previous 
		conditional recommendations endorsing them, as part of a suite of 
		recommendations published
		https://www.bmj.com/ 
		
		content/370/bmj.m3379  in the British Medical Journal. 
		 
		GSK and partner Vir Biotechnology's sotrovimab - which has generated 
		billions in sales and became one of the British drugmaker's top sellers 
		last year - was pulled off the U.S. market by the U.S. Food and Drug 
		Administration (FDA) in April. 
		 
		Given the United States had begun to question sotrovimab's clinical 
		effectiveness against Omicron as early as February, the WHO's 
		realisation is coming a little late, said Penny Ward, visiting professor 
		in pharmaceutical medicine at King's College London. 
		
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			  "Now WHO has issued this 
			recommendation, it will be interesting to see how many other 
			countries align with it," she said. 
			 
			Regeneron and partner Roche's antibody cocktail 
			casirivimab-imdevimab has also generated billions in sales and was 
			one of the U.S. drugmaker's top sellers last year. 
			 
			Back in January, the FDA revised its stance on the treatment, 
			limiting its use to a smaller group of patients, citing its 
			diminished potency against the Omicron variant. 
			
			
			  
			Both therapies continue to be recommended for use by the European 
			drugs regulator. 
			 
			Another COVID therapy that emerged early in pandemic was Gilead's 
			antiviral remdesivir. The WHO expanded its conditional 
			recommendation for the drug, advising that it can be used in 
			patients with severe COVID as well as non-severe COVID patients at 
			the highest risk of hospitalization. 
			 
			There are a handful of existing COVID therapeutics that remain 
			useful in the fight against the virus, and others in development 
			that are expected to also benefit patients. 
			 
			(This story Corrects to explain WHO has expanded conditional use of 
			remdesivir to include severe COVID patients in paragraph 11) 
			 
			(Reporting by Natalie Grover in London; Editing by Elaine Hardcastle) 
			
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