Drug Cocktail Found To Speed Up Coronavirus Recovery

"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("

"); });
2020-05-09 HKT 11:27
Local researchers have found that patients suffering milder illness caused by the new coronavirus recover more quickly if they are treated with a three-drug antiviral cocktail soon after symptoms appear.
Authors of the study, published in the Lancet on Friday, called for larger-scale research on critically-ill patients to ascertain if the drug combo could be a viable treatment for them too.
"Our trial demonstrates that early treatment of mild to moderate Covid-19 with a triple combination of antiviral drugs may rapidly suppress the amount of virus in a patient's body," said Yuen Kwok-yung, professor at the University of Hong Kong, who led the research.
He said the treatment, which appeared safe in patients, was shown to "relieve symptoms, and reduce the risk to health-care workers by reducing the duration and quantity of viral shedding (when the virus is detectable and potentially transmissible)".
Of those participating, 86 patients were given a two-week course of three medicines: interferon beta-1b, a drug used to treat multiple sclerosis; HIV drugs lopinavir-ritonavir; and ribavirin, used to treat hepatitis.
A randomly-assigned control group of 41 people was just given the lopinavir-ritonavir combination.
They found that those taking all three medicines were able to clear the coronavirus in seven days on average – "significantly" shorter than the 12-day average for the control group.
Those on the three-drug regimen also saw a complete alleviation of their symptoms in an average of four days, compared to eight for the control group.
The authors conceded several limitations with the trial, including that it was "open label" – people knew which drugs they were taking and there was no placebo.
Also, patients admitted more than seven days after the onset of symptoms were not given interferon because of concerns that it could cause inflammation. Of these, 34 were given the combination of lopinavir-ritonavir and ribavirin, while 17 were in the control group.
Both of these groups took equally long to clear the virus which, the authors suggested, meant that interferon was key to the shorter illness for the patients treated from the first week of symptoms.
Reacting to the study, Stephen Evans, Professor of Pharmacoepidemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said it "justifies the consideration of adding interferon beta to the list of genuinely, evidence-based, promising treatments to be tested in further randomised trials.” (AFP)
China CITIC Bank Launches Payment Connect Services To Support Cross-Border Transactions
China CITIC Bank International Limited (CNCBI) has announced it will introduce services and a customer offer related to... Read more
Eddid Financial Secures SFC Approval For Digital Asset Services
Hong Kong’s Eddid Financial has announced that its subsidiary, Eddid Securities and Futures, has received approval fr... Read more
Hong Kong Customs Uncovers HK$1.15B Virtual Asset Money Laundering Scheme
Hong Kong Customs has uncovered a suspected money laundering operation involving cash smuggling and virtual assets tota... Read more
Lendela Partners With TransUnion To Launch Free Credit Score Tool In Hong Kong
Lendela, a loan matching platform based in Hong Kong, has partnered with credit reference agency TransUnion through a c... Read more
Hex Trust Appoints Rohit Apte As Head Of Markets
Hex Trust, a digital asset financial institution specialising in custody, staking, and markets services, has appointed ... Read more
Scaling Across APAC: Why Cross-Border Payments Matter More Than Ever
In today’s digital-first economy, the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region has emerged as a global hotspot for fintech innovati... Read more