HeadlineNew Ebola Drug Shows 90% Survival Rate

New Ebola Drug Shows 90% Survival Rate

GTBCO FOOD DRINL

BEVERLY HILLS, August 13, (THEWILL) – Ebola may soon be a “preventable and treatable” disease after a trial of two drugs showed significantly improved survival rates, scientists have said.

Four drugs were trialled on patients in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where there is a major outbreak of the virus.

More than 90% of infected people can survive if treated early with the most effective drugs, the research showed.

Glo

The BBC reports that the drugs will now be used to treat all patients with the disease in DR Congo, according to health officials.

The US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), which co-sponsored the trial, said the results are “very good news” for the fight against Ebola.

The drugs, named REGN-EB3 and mAb114, work by attacking the Ebola virus with antibodies, neutralising its impact on human cells.

They are the “first drugs that, in a scientifically sound study, have clearly shown a significant diminution in mortality” for Ebola patients, said Dr Anthony Fauci, director of NIAID.

REGN-EB3 and mAb114 were developed using antibodies harvested from survivors of Ebola, which has killed more than 1,800 people in DR Congo in the past year.

Two other treatments, called ZMapp and Remdesivir, have been dropped from trials as they were found to be less effective.

The trial, conducted by an international research group co-ordinated by the World Health Organization (WHO), began in November last year.

Since then, four experimental drugs have been tested on around 700 patients, with the preliminary results from the first 499 now known.

Of the patients given the two more effective drugs, 29% on REGN-EB3 and 34% on mAb114 died, NIAID said.

In contrast, 49% on ZMapp and 53% on Remdesivir died in the study, the agency said.

The survival rate among patients with low levels of the virus in their blood was as high as 94% when they were given REGN-EB3, and 89% when on mAb114, the agency said.

The findings mean health authorities can “stress to people that more than 90% of people survive” if they are treated early, said Sabue Mulangu, an infectious-disease researcher who worked on the trial.

About the Author

Homepage | Recent Posts
Ask ZiVA 728x90 Ads

More like this
Related

BREAKING: Tinubu Appoints Jim Ovia Chairman Of Nigerian Education Loan Fund

April 26, (THEWILL)- President Bola Tinubu has approved the...

Japa: Only 58,000 Of 130,000 Registered Doctors In Nigeria Renewed Licence — MDCN

April 26, (THEWILL)- The Medical and Dental Council of...

World Malaria Day: Ibom Air Launches FAM-Pack, Signature CRS Project

April 26, (THEWILL)- In commemoration of the 2024 World...