Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla says that an oral drug for COVID-19 could be ready next year.
“If all goes well, and we implement the same speed that we are, and if regulators do the same, and they are, I hope that by the end of the year,” Bourla said on CNBC's "Squawk Box."
Speaking on "Squawk Box," Bourla said Pfizer is working on two antivirals, an oral and an injectable.
The company began an early-stage clinical trial of the oral drug late last month. The drug blocks protease, a critical enzyme that the virus needs to replicate.
“Particular attention is on the oral because it provides several advantages,” Bourla said. “One of them is that you don’t need to go to the hospital to get the treatment, which is the case with all the injectables so far. You could get it at home, and that could be a game-changer.”
He also said the medication could be “way more effective against the multiple variants” of the virus than current options.
Thus far, more than 121 million doses of the vaccine have been administered across the country.
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