(TNS) - Scientists at Bay Area universities, laboratories, biotechnology companies and drug manufacturers are fashioning drug concoctions out of blood plasma, chimpanzee viruses and cells taken from bone marrow in the race to rid the world of COVID-19.
The microbial treasure hunt is not just to find a cure which may not be possible but to control the debilitating health problems caused by the coronavirus.
Major progress has been made this year. The antiviral drug remdesivir, produced in Foster City, has improved recovery times, and the steroid dexamethasone has cut the number of deaths in severely ill patients.
What follows is a list of some of the most promising medications and vaccines with ties to the Bay Area:
Antibodies
and Immunity
Mesenchymal stem cells / UCSF and UC Davis Medical Center:
UCSF Dr. Michael Matthay is leading a study of whether a kind of stem cell found in bone marrow can help critically ill patients with severe respiratory failure, known as ARDS. Matthay hopes the stem cells can help reduce the inflammation associated with some of ARDS' most dire respiratory symptoms, and help patients' lungs recover.
In all, 120 patients are being enrolled at UCSF Medical Center, Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, the UC Davis Medical Center in Sacramento and hospitals in Oregon and Texas. He said the trial, which includes a small number of ARDS patients who don't have COVID-19, should have results by summer or fall 2021. So far, 28 patients are enrolled in San Francisco.
Lambda-interferon / Stanford University:
Lambda-interferon is a manufactured version of a naturally occurring protein that had been used to treat hepatitis, and researchers hoped it would help patients in the early stages of COVID-19.
Stanford researchers completed their trial of lambda-interferon and found that it did not boost the immune system response to coronavirus infections.
"That trial did not find any difference in outcomes between the treatment and placebo," said Yvonne Maldonado, chief of pediatric infectious diseases at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford, where 120 patients were enrolled in the trial. "It didn't work."
Antiviral drugs
Remdesivir / Gilead Sciences ( Foster City):
Remdesivir, once conceived as a potential treatment for Ebola, was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in October for use on hospitalized COVID-19 patients.
Trademarked under the name Veklury, the drug interferes with the process through which the virus replicates itself. It was one of the drugs given to President Trump and has been used regularly in hospitals under what is known as an emergency use authorization.
It was approved after three clinical trials showed hospitalized coronavirus patients who received remdesivir recovered five days faster on average than those who received a placebo. Patients who required oxygen recovered seven days faster, according to the studies.
Gilead now plans to conduct clinical trials to see how remdesivir works on pediatric patients, from newborns to teenagers, with moderate to severe COVID-19 symptoms. Remdesivir is also being studied with steroids and other drugs to see if it works better as part of a medicinal cocktail. An inhalable form of the drug is also being developed.
Favipiravir / Fujifilm Toyama Chemical ( Stanford University):
This antiviral drug, developed in 2014 by a subsidiary of the Japanese film company to treat influenza, is undergoing numerous clinical studies worldwide, including a trial involving 180 patients at Stanford University.
Stanford epidemiologists are testing favipiravir to see if it prevents the coronavirus from replicating in human cells, halts the shedding of the virus and reduces the severity of infection. Unlike remdesivir, it can be administered orally, so it can be used to treat patients early in the disease, before hospitalization is necessary.
The Stanford study has so far enrolled about 90 patients, who are given the drug within 72 hours of when they were first diagnosed with COVID-19. Half of them get a placebo. People can enroll by emailing treatcovid@stanford.edu.
Monoclonal antibodies
REGN-COV2 / Regeneron Pharmaceuticals / Stanford School of Medicine:
The REGN-COV2 cocktail is the same one Trump received, and Stanford is one of dozens of locations nationwide where clinical trials are being held. Two separate trials are under way at Stanford one for hospitalized patients, the other for outpatients. A third trial is about to begin for people who aren't sick but are in contact with carriers of the virus.
Regeneron halted testing on severely ill patients requiring high-flow oxygen or mechanical ventilation after the independent Data and Safety Monitoring Board determined that the drug was unlikely to help them.
The drug is a combination of two monoclonal antibodies lab-made clones of the antibodies produced naturally in people who have recovered from COVID-19. The antibodies bind to the virus' spike protein and block the virus' ability to enter cells.
Dr. Aruna Subramanian, professor of infectious diseases at Stanford and lead investigator for the inpatient trial, said the 21 hospitalized patients in the study receive a high dose like Trump, a lower dose or a placebo. Subramanian plans to expand the inpatient trial to 45 patients. The outpatient study has enrolled a little more than 40 of the 60 patients researchers intend to sign up.
"There's enough promising evidence that it helps people early in the infection," Subramanian said. "What we don't know is whether it helps people who are pretty sick but not critically ill."
Bamlanivimab / Eli Lilly / Stanford and UCSF:
Stanford and UCSF are testing the Eli Lilly monoclonal antibodies on outpatients after the pharmaceutical company halted trials on hospitalized COVID-19 patients because of adverse results.
Dr. Andra Blomkalns, chair of emergency medicine at Stanford and the lead in the Eli Lilly outpatient trial, said she is now enrolling older people with comorbidities like heart disease, chronic lung disease, a history of strokes and severe obesity shortly after they test positive.
The hypothesis is that the bamlanivimab monotherapy, which is very similar to the Regeneron monoclonals, might work best early in the infection. Although about 400 patients have been enrolled in the Lilly phase 3 trials nationwide, to date fewer than 10 have been enrolled at Stanford and UCSF.
Matthay, who headed up the Lilly monoclonal study with LY-CoV555 at UCSF, said the cancellation of this inpatient trial was disappointing, but "just because this one did not work, doesn't mean another one won't work for hospitalized patients."
Blomkalns said the testing criteria has been changing. She expects the outpatient trial to open soon to adolescents ages 12 and up to determine whether the drug can be used as a preventive.
Designer monoclonal antibodies / Vir Biotechnology, San Francisco:
Scientists at Vir are studying several types of monoclonal antibodies, including a type engineered to activate T cells, which can search out and destroy cells infected with the coronavirus. A study published in the journal Nature in October found that monoclonals, modified to bind with certain receptors, stimulated T cells and improved the human immune response.
"By observing and learning from our body's powerful natural defenses, we have discovered how to maximize the capacity of antibodies through the amplification of key characteristics that may enable more effective treatments for viral diseases," said Herbert Virgin, the chief scientific officer at Vir and co-author of the study.
A similarly modified monoclonal antibody, leronlimab, is being studied in coronavirus clinical trials by its Washington state drugmaker, CytoDyn, which has developed drugs to treat HIV. The company's chief medical officer is in San Francisco, and the company that does laboratory tests of leronlimab is in San Carlos.
Anti-inflammatory drugs
Colchicine / UCSF ( San Francisco and New York):
The anti-inflammatory drug commonly used to treat gout flare-ups is being studied by scientists at UCSF and New York University. The drug short-circuits inflammation by decreasing the body's production of certain proteins, and researchers hope that it will reduce lung complications and prevent deaths from COVID-19.
Preliminary results from a clinical trial found that "Colchicine can be effective in reducing systemic symptoms of COVID-19 by inhibiting inflammatory biomarkers."
Selinexor / Kaiser Permanente:
Kaiser hospitals in San Francisco, Oakland and Sacramento are studying selinexor, an anticancer drug that blocks a key protein in the cellular machinery for DNA processing. Preliminary findings during the trials indicated that low doses of selinexor helped hospitalized patients with severe COVID-19. The drug has both antiviral and anti-inflammatory properties, and it's administered orally, according to Kaiser's Dr. Jacek Skarbinski.
Vaccines
VXA-COV2-1 / Vaxart, South San Francisco:
The biotechnology company Vaxart is testing VXA-COV2-1, the only potential vaccine in pill form. It uses the genetic code of the coronavirus to trigger a defensive response in mucous membranes. The hope is that the newly fortified membranes will prevent the virus from entering the body.
"It's the only vaccine (candidate) that activates the first line of defense, which is the mucosa," said Andrei Floroiu, Vaxart's chief executive. He said intravenous vaccines kill the virus after it is inside the body, but this one stops it beforehand.
View original post here:
Coronavirus Updates: The Latest Treatments and Vaccines - GovTech
- Exosomes Are Being Hyped as a Silver Bullet Therapy. Scientists Say No. - Singularity Hub - December 28th, 2024
- UC Irvine Study Reveals Risks Associated with Direct-to-Consumer Ads for Stem Cell and Exosome COVID-19 Therapies - India Education Diary - November 18th, 2023
- STEM | Description, Development, & Facts | Britannica - January 31st, 2023
- What is STEM Education? | Live Science - January 31st, 2023
- Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math, including Computer Science - ed - January 23rd, 2023
- What Does STEM Stand For? Definition, Degrees and More - January 23rd, 2023
- What Is STEM? - Definition & Resources for Teachers - January 23rd, 2023
- Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics - Wikipedia - January 23rd, 2023
- Stem Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster - January 23rd, 2023
- November: labblood-study | News and features - University of Bristol - November 7th, 2022
- Creative Medical Technology Holdings Announces FDA Clearance of Investigational New Drug (IND) Application for AlloStem, a Novel Cell Therapy for the... - November 7th, 2022
- Janssen to Highlight Latest Scientific Advances in Hematologic Diseases at ASH 2022 with Clinical and Real-World Data Across Innovative Pipeline and... - November 7th, 2022
- Type 2 Diabetes Stem Cell Therapy - Top U.S. Stem Cell ... - January 1st, 2022
- Cancer Drug Approvals from 2021 That Patients May Have Missed - Curetoday.com - January 1st, 2022
- Late effects in survivors of high-risk neuroblastoma following stem cell transplant with and without total body irradiation - DocWire News - January 1st, 2022
- The new life of a teenager with a strange tumor on his face after the operation - Market Research Telecast - January 1st, 2022
- Best of what was new in diabetes health for 2021 - Dickson Post - January 1st, 2022
- Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation - StatPearls ... - December 22nd, 2021
- Autologous Stem Cell Transplant for Multiple Myeloma - December 22nd, 2021
- City of Hope presents leading-edge research on blood cancer therapies and its vaccine to reduce stem cell transplant complications at American Society... - December 22nd, 2021
- Adaptation Is Key to Advancing Care for Adult Patients With Leukemia - OncLive - December 22nd, 2021
- FDA Approves First Drug to Prevent Graft Versus Host Disease | FDA - FDA.gov - December 22nd, 2021
- Vera Therapeutics Announces Acquisition of Monoclonal Antibody From Pfizer to Treat BK Virus in Transplant Patients - Yahoo Finance - December 22nd, 2021
- After throwing goodbye party, woman with cancer finds hope close to home in Austin - Austin American-Statesman - December 22nd, 2021
- Dr. K.M. Cherian Heart Foundation & Educational Society Organized Cme Programme & Workshop On Cell Culture And Regenerative Medicine - APN... - December 22nd, 2021
- Namesake of new center a young man in love with the pursuit of knowledge - The Saint Anselm Crier - November 7th, 2021
- Red Cross blood drive focuses on sickle cell disease fight - Palladium-Item - November 7th, 2021
- Shockwave therapy brings new healing opportunities for heart attack patients and hope for people with spinal cord injuries - KULR-TV - November 7th, 2021
- 1st CRISPR Gene Editing Trial Slated to Open in Severe SCD Patients - Sickle Cell Anemia News - April 4th, 2021
- Transplant After CD19 CAR T-Cell Therapy Shows Durable Disease Control in Children, Young Adults With B-ALL - Cancer Network - April 4th, 2021
- Timely Bone Marrow Transplant by Fortis gives new lease of life to a patient with Multiple Myeloma - APN News - April 4th, 2021
- Kirron Kher is suffering with Multiple Myeloma: Know the causes, symptoms and more about this type of blood cancer - Jagran English - April 4th, 2021
- Decitabine Improved Outcomes for Patients With Refractory Prolonged Isolated Thrombocytopenia - Hematology Advisor - April 4th, 2021
- Lake in the Hills police officer and father of 4 kids battling rare cancer forced to retire - Lake and McHenry County Scanner - April 4th, 2021
- Insulin 100: How the road to a diabetes cure is yielding better treatments - News@UofT - April 4th, 2021
- Boxcar Scars Market |Exclusive Report on Latest Trends and Market Growth Opportunities - BioSpace - April 4th, 2021
- Merck Receives Positive EU CHMP Opinion for Updated Label of KEYTRUDA (pembrolizumab) To Include Results of Phase 3 KEYNOTE-361 Trial in Certain Adult... - April 4th, 2021
- BeyondSpring Announces Submission of New Drug Application to US FDA and China NMPA for Plinabulin and G-CSF Combination for the Prevention of... - April 4th, 2021
- Types of leukemia: Prevalence, treatment options, and prognosis - Medical News Today - February 14th, 2021
- Roche receives first FDA clearance for urine sample type for BK virus quantitative test to aid in the improvement of care for transplant patients -... - February 14th, 2021
- Energy drinks may damage the heart, researchers warnshould the FDA get involved? - Cardiovascular Business - February 14th, 2021
- FDA Approves G1 Therapeutics' COSELA (trilaciclib): The First and Only Myeloprotection Therapy to Decrease the Incidence of Chemotherapy-Induced... - February 14th, 2021
- Easter Ross mum of blood cancer tot urges would-be stem cell donors to show the love this Valentine's Day; Alness lass Adeline Davidson's plight... - February 14th, 2021
- Global Induced Pluripotent Market Positive Outlook, Revenue Generation & Leading Manufacturers, Forecast 2026||CELGENE CORPORATION; Astellas... - February 14th, 2021
- Leukemia in children: Symptoms, causes, treatment, outlook, and more - Medical News Today - February 7th, 2021
- After Bone Marrow Donation Saves 9-Year-Old Boy With Cancer, Boston Mom Fights To Raise Awareness - Here And Now - February 7th, 2021
- Understanding bone marrow transplant: The guidelines and the protocols - The New Indian Express - February 4th, 2021
- Why Cynata is hopeful its COVID treatment trial will succeed where others have failed - Business News Australia - February 4th, 2021
- Mobilize family caregivers to speed the rollout of Covid-19 vaccines - STAT - February 4th, 2021
- People With Cancer Should Receive COVID-19 Vaccine, Experts Say - Cancer Health Treatment News - February 4th, 2021
- Evotec and Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf Enter Partnership to Develop iPSC-Based Tissue Therapy f - PharmiWeb.com - February 4th, 2021
- APOE Tied to Increased Susceptibility to SARS-CoV-2 | ALZFORUM - Alzforum - February 4th, 2021
- Transforming Outcomes in Advanced CSCC with Immunotherapy - LWW Journals - February 4th, 2021
- Ashley Cain is living his worst nightmare as his baby daughter battles leukaemia in hospital - The Sun - February 4th, 2021
- Canada's blood supply has a diversity problem and people are dying because of it - CBC.ca - February 1st, 2021
- Autologous Stem Cell and Non Stem Based therapies Market Share, Size 2021 Global Industry Future Trends, Growth, Strategies,, Segmentation, In-depth... - February 1st, 2021
- Merck Receives Positive EU CHMP Opinion for Expanded Approval of KEYTRUDA (pembrolizumab) in Certain Patients With Relapsed or Refractory Classical... - February 1st, 2021
- Merck Presents Results From Head-to-Head Phase 3 KEYNOTE-598 Trial Evaluating KEYTRUDA (pembrolizumab) in Combination With Ipilimumab Versus KEYTRUDA... - February 1st, 2021
- Disabled People Are Waiting, Anxiously, For Lifesaving Covid-19 Vaccinations - Forbes - February 1st, 2021
- Family of Belfast woman Eimear Gooderham (25) share memories and dealing with grief in special UTV programme - Belfast Telegraph - February 1st, 2021
- Single-cell molecular profiling of all three components of the HPA axis reveals adrenal ABCB1 as a regulator of stress adaptation - Science Advances - February 1st, 2021
- The Need for New Biological Targets for Therapeutic Intervention in COPD - Pulmonology Advisor - February 1st, 2021
- What Patients With Cancer, Survivors Need to Know About the Emergency Use Authorization of COVID-19 Vaccine - Curetoday.com - December 19th, 2020
- Every Patient Treated With CRISPR Gene Therapy for Blood Diseases Continues to Thrive, More Than a Year On - Good News Network - December 19th, 2020
- Are Hiccups a Sign of the New Coronavirus? - Healthline - December 19th, 2020
- KEYTRUDA Plus LENVIMA Combination Demonstrated Statistically Significant Improvement in Overall Survival, Progression-Free Survival and Objective... - December 19th, 2020
- Covid-19 can have impact on heart too, say experts - Hindustan Times - December 19th, 2020
- Even if You've Had COVID-19 You Still Need the Vaccine - Healthline - December 19th, 2020
- The Link Between Cancer and Metabolic Dysfunction - Technology Networks - December 19th, 2020
- Diamyd Medical and Critical Path Institute announce data sharing collaboration to develop advanced drug development tools in type 1 diabetes -... - December 19th, 2020
- Gene therapy gives man with sickle cell disease the chance for a better future - Science Codex - December 3rd, 2020
- Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial to Evaluate Safety and Therapeutic Efficacy of Angiogenesis Induced by Intraarterial Autologous... - December 3rd, 2020
- Graft Versus Host Disease (GVHD) Patient Population, Treatment Algorithm, Medical Practices And Epidemiology Forecast To 2030 - The Market Feed - December 3rd, 2020
- Government of Canada and JDRF Canada announce new research funding to accelerate stem cell-based therapies for type 1 diabetes - India Education Diary - December 3rd, 2020
- Coinfection: more than the sum of its parts - Science Codex - November 19th, 2020
- Angiocrine Bioscience Announces FDA Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy (RMAT) Designation Granted to AB-205 (Universal E-CEL Cell Therapy) to... - November 17th, 2020
- FDA Approves Merck's KEYTRUDA in Combination With Chemotherapy for Patients With Locally Recurrent Unresectable or Metastatic Triple?Negative Breast... - November 17th, 2020
- Human mesenchymal stromal cells do not express ACE2 and TMPRSS2 and are not permissive to SARS-CoV-2 infection - DocWire News - November 17th, 2020
- Cleveland Clinic team draws a link between COVID-19 protection and the sleep aid melatonin - FierceBiotech - November 17th, 2020
- UH announces participation in clinical trial testing antibodies to treat COVID-19 in adults - News 5 Cleveland - November 7th, 2020