Monday, April 29, 2024
ADVT 
International

EU regulator starts safety review of coronavirus drug

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Oct, 2020 11:27 PM
  • EU regulator starts safety review of coronavirus drug

The European Medicines Agency says it has started a safety review after some patients taking the coronavirus drug remdesivir reported serious kidney problems.

In a statement on Friday, the EU regulator said it isn’t clear whether remdesivir was causing the “acute kidney injury,” but that the issue “warrants further investigation.”

Remdesivir was given a conditional marketing authorization by the EMA on July 3 and can be used to treat people older than age 12 with severe COVID-19 and pneumonia who require oxygen treatment. The approval for the drug was fast-tracked with the understanding that more evidence would be submitted after a license was granted.

“The benefits to these severely ill patients outweigh the risks of making the medicine available despite having less complete data than normally expected,” the EMA said.

Remdesivir is one of the few licensed treatments for the coronavirus, in addition to the generic steroid dexamethasone. In July, health experts criticized the United States for buying up a significant portion of the drug, made by Gilead Sciences.

The European Medicines Agency said the potential problem of kidney toxicity caused by remdesivir was evaluated when the conditional approval was given but that analysis was mainly based on animal studies. It noted that kidney injuries can be caused by other factors, including diabetes and the coronavirus itself.

The regulator said recommendations for the use of remdesivir remain unchanged; doctors are already advised to monitor patients for kidney complications prior to starting treatment and not to use the drug in patients with known kidney problems.

The agency said “enhanced safety monitoring” is in place to detect potentially worrying and unexpected side effects from remdesivir through monthly safety reports.

Early studies testing remdesivir in patients hospitalized with COVID-19 found that those who received the treatment recovered quicker than those who didn’t.

On Thursday, the EMA said it had begun the process of potentially fast-tracking approval for an experimental COVID-19 vaccine developed by Oxford University and AstraZeneca.

MORE International ARTICLES

Still too soon to try altering human embryo DNA, panel says

Still too soon to try altering human embryo DNA, panel says
Thursday’s report comes nearly two years after a Chinese scientist shocked the world by revealing he’d helped make the first gene-edited babies using a tool called CRISPR, which enables DNA changes or “edits” that can pass to future generations.

Still too soon to try altering human embryo DNA, panel says

Members named to panel probing WHO's pandemic response

Members named to panel probing WHO's pandemic response
Johnson Sirleaf chose the panel members independently and that WHO did not attempt to influence their choices.

Members named to panel probing WHO's pandemic response

Champion of aluminum tariffs faces critics

Champion of aluminum tariffs faces critics
In an online forum today hosted by the Washington International Trade Association, DeFrancesco squared off against critics of the decision, including leading industry groups in both Canada and the U.S.

Champion of aluminum tariffs faces critics

Prince Harry and Meghan sign production deal with Netflix

Prince Harry and Meghan sign production deal with Netflix
The prince worked closely with the filmmakers of the documentary “Rising Phoenix,” in which he also appears. It premiered last week on Netflix.

Prince Harry and Meghan sign production deal with Netflix

Alleged neo-Nazi wants U.S. charges quashed

Alleged neo-Nazi wants U.S. charges quashed
Prosecutors in Maryland allege the three men were part of an elaborate white-supremacist plot to touch off a U.S. race war.

Alleged neo-Nazi wants U.S. charges quashed

Boy Scouts launch ads on how abuse victims can seek money

Boy Scouts launch ads on how abuse victims can seek money
Lawyer Paul Mones, who won a $19.9 million sex-abuse verdict against the Boy Scouts in Oregon in 2010, described the campaign as historic.

Boy Scouts launch ads on how abuse victims can seek money