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Friday, April 10, 2020

Coronavirus enters cells via key receptor: Can targeting it lead to treatment?

Nearly 20 years ago, when a different coronavirus struck, Michael Farzan and his team figured out how it was getting into human cells: targeting a specific receptor called ACE2 found on certain cells.
During this year’s ongoing novel coronavirus outbreak, that receptor has attracted fresh attention as a potential target for drug companies because it seems to offer a cellular doorknob for this coronavirus, too.
Farzan, a virologist at the Scripps Research Institute’s Florida campus, and other experts believe treatments targeting ACE2, or angiotensin converting enzyme-2, could be the key to unlocking either a coronavirus vaccine or a treatment for Covid-19. The work targeting the receptor is one pathway among dozens that biotech and pharmaceutical companies are exploring as they race to find drugs that could help bring the pandemic under control.
Three pharmaceutical companies are working on two ACE2-related drugs — each working with the receptor in diametrically opposite ways. Apeiron Biologics, a company based in Austria, is trying to offer the virus more ACE2 to bind with, in hopes that the flood will confuse the virus. Alnylam Pharmaceuticals and Vir Biotechnology are trying to offer it less, thinking it will struggle to take hold in the body with less to bind to.
Apeiron expects to have results from its latest clinical trial in late fall. Alnylam’s ACE2 program is much further from reality; the company doesn’t expect to have something it could test in humans for several more months.
In a healthy person, the ACE2 receptor chops up two forms of a protein called angiotensin to keep blood pressure stable, among other things. SARS and the novel coronavirus, however, use the receptor to infiltrate cells, according to a paper published in March in Cell. The virus can latch onto ACE2 and sneak inside, replicating itself inside the cell and then wreaking havoc throughout the body.
Normally, ACE2 is found on lung, kidney, heart, and gut cells. But scientists recently found ACE2 receptors on the cells in peoples’ noses — an “aha” moment for people like Farzen who had studied the 2003-era SARS virus.
“It was never quite clear how the virus trafficked all the way to the lower respiratory tract to give you this horrendous pneumonia,” he said.
Understanding how the new coronavirus exploits ACE2 is powerful information — but scientists haven’t agreed on what it ultimately means. As recently as March, more ACE2 was thought to be a risk factor for people with Covid-19. The French health ministry even warned against prescribing non-steroidal anti-inflammatories like ibuprofen because those drugs are thought to increase the number of ACE2 receptors on cells.
However, the World Health Organization and the European Medicines Agency both declined to make similar warnings, citing a lack of evidence. And some scientists and pharmaceutical companies suspect that adding more ACE2 into the body might actually distract the virus and help patients.
They hope that using a floating version of enzyme, rather than the ones that stick onto cells, could trick many of the viruses inside a person’s body. If the virus binds with the drug rather than onto the cells, it can’t replicate and spread.
“As I like to say, ‘It’s the virus, stupid.’ Stop the virus to stop the disease,” said Farzan, who is not involved with Apeiron, Alnylam, or Vir.
Apeiron first started developing its experimental treatment targeting ACE2 in the mid-2000s, after the first SARS outbreak. In 2010, it licensed the drug to GSK for about $17 million.
The larger pharmaceutical company put it into clinical trials for acute respiratory distress syndrome and acute lung injury, but decided to cut the program in the middle of last year, along with 10 other programs focused on respiratory illnesses. Apeiron got the rights to the drug back.
“We were sitting there thinking, ‘OK, what should we do with this?’ And all of a sudden this virus started,” said Apeiron’s CEO, Peter Llewellyn-Davies.
Because GSK had already run clinical trials in humans to show that the drug was safe, Apeiron was quickly able to set up another trial at 11 sites across Europe. The company hopes to recruit about 200 patients, who will receive two treatments per day over the course of a week.
Apeiron is trying to prepare for the best-case scenario: that its drug will actually work for people with Covid-19. The company has asked its manufacturer to make enough to get it through the current trial; over the next few weeks, Llewellyn-Davies said, it will be analyzing how much demand it might need to anticipate in the event the trial results are good.
But Apeiron probably won’t be able to bring the drug to the market on its own.
“We will probably need a pharmaceutical partner to do this,” Llewellyn-Davies acknowledged. “It’s certainly worth going into negotiations as soon as possible because, you know, things might happen very, very quickly.”
Alnylam and Vir are taking an entirely different approach. Alnylam’s products rely on a technique known as RNA interference, through which scientists use strands of genetic material to mute disease-causing genes.
Normally, they’re silencing a protein that’s causing a disease because there’s too much of it in the body or it’s mutated. In this case, though, they’re hoping to use the technique to silence the ACE2 receptor. Without the receptor to bind to, Alnylam believes, the virus won’t be able to get in.
This “host factor” approach is more roundabout than a typical drug. Technically, Alnylam and Vir’s treatment won’t do anything to the virus itself. It will still enter the body if people come into contact with it, but it won’t have nearly as many opportunities to invade people’s cells. If it can’t get into people’s cells, it can’t survive and spread.
“There are other antivirals that act on host factors,” Alnylam CEO John Maraganore noted, citing interferon, a synthetic version of a protein that has become a treatment for hepatitis C and multiple sclerosis. “In the history of developing antivirals, [targeting] host factors are an established strategy.”
But as Maraganore noted, there are big questions about whether knocking down ACE2, even temporarily, could have unintended consequences. Angiotensin levels can regulate a person’s blood pressure and start (or stop) inflammatory processes.
“It’s very, very complicated. And I have to say that humanity does not have a clear understanding of [ACE2’s] role,” Farzen said.
Even if the drug is safe, getting it where it needs to be in order to have an effect could be another challenge.
Delivering RNA-based drugs anywhere other than the liver has been a perennial challenge, noted Jim McSwiggen, a biotech consultant who has worked for several RNA companies — and who was one of three co-inventors on a patent filed in the early 2000s on a way of using RNA interference to treat SARS.
In this case, McSwiggen said, there might be a way to put strands of RNA into bubbles of fat. Patients could potentially inhale them as a dry powder.
“I don’t know how small the particles would have to be to get into the deepest part of the lungs,” he said. “But there’s a lot of people who think about drug delivery to the lung. So I’m sure that there are people who can come up, solve that problem.”
Alnylam thinks it has a solution to that problem; it has already run some animal studies on a way to get its drugs into the lungs for other indications.
But Farzen said he was skeptical that Alnylam and Vir’s approach is the right one — certainly at first. “They have a hammer, and they tried to find a nail. But the nail is not a good nail here,” he said.
Maraganore noted that the ACE2 program is just one of the Covid-19 programs Alnylam and Vir are working on; one of their other efforts would use RNA interference to attack the virus directly.
And Maraganore also said he hoped that all the attention now being paid to ACE2 and other antiviral programs would continue even after the worst of the pandemic has passed.
“We have a lot of societal ADD when it comes to the work that we do on antivirals,” he said. “We have a tendency as a society to, you know, launch these big efforts around the time of a public health crisis.
“When the public health crisis goes away, you know, we all sort of downplay it and don’t do work on it and ignore it or put it aside,” Maraganore said. “And sometimes, you have to get hit by a two-by-four like this current pandemic to realize that that’s a really bad idea.”
The coronavirus sneaks into cells through a key receptor. Could targeting it lead to a treatment?

FDA grants emergency authorization to two blood purification systems

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Friday issued emergency use authorizations to blood purification devices manufactured by Terumo Corp. 4543, +0.13% and Marker Therapeutics Inc. MRKR, +1.74% in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Terumo is a Japanese medical device maker. Marker is a clinical-stage immuno-oncology company based in Houston. An EUA does not mean that that the device has been approved by the FDA; it is an authorization granted during an emergency when there are no other treatment options available. The regulator said that the devices can be used for adult patients with COVID-19 who are being cared for in the intensive care unit and have confirmed or imminent respiratory failure to reduce the amount of cytokines in those patients. Some severely ill COVID-19 patients have had “cytokine storms” that can lead to organ failure and death. Year-to-date, Terumo’s stock is down 3.9%, while shares of Marker have dropped 39.2%. The S&P 500 SPX, +1.44% has dropped 13.6% since the beginning of 2020.
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/fda-grants-emergency-authorization-to-two-blood-purification-systems-2020-04-10

USNS Comfort, Javits Center mostly empty as coronavirus strains NY ERs

The USNS Comfort and the Javits Center field hospital remain practically empty of COVID-19 patients as both Department of Defense-run facilities strictly manage intake while getting up to speed — to the frustration of medical staffers at swamped city emergency rooms.
The Navy-manned, 500-bed Comfort, which docked last week on the city’s West Side — and was  this week reconfigured to take high-severity coronavirus cases — has just over 60 patients, Navy officials said Thursday.
And the Army-manned, 1,000-bed Javits Center field hospital — now serving lower-severity COVID-19 cases — had only 225 patients, officials said Thursday.
Meanwhile, cramped hospitals are being told that nearly all of their patients don’t fit the “criteria” for admission at either facility, frustrated staffers and public officials complain.
“It’s bulls–t,” one staffer at the overcrowded Metropolitan Hospital Center in East Harlem told The Post of a 25-point checklist for transferring patients to Javits.
The worker, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the hospital recently asked Javits to take 95 of their COVID-19 patients, but only one made the cut.
And yet hospital admissions continue to rise.
“Big problem,” agreed a staffer at Jacobi Hospital in the Bronx, when asked about the tight criteria at Javits and the Comfort.
Jacobi has some 100 admitted patients it cannot find room for, the staffer said Thursday.
“We’re still backed up 50 deep in both adult and pediatric ERs,” said the staffer, taking a few seconds out of a busy shift to text The Post. “There’s no beds.”
A state health official who asked not to be identified countered that the head of the city’s Health and Hospitals Corporation — which includes Jacobi and Metropolitan — was on Thursday’s daily conference call with hospital executives.
“When state health officials asked if there were any patient capacity issues, we were told there were no issues,” the official said.
The relative emptiness of the two federally run hospitals did not sit well with City Council Health Committee Chairman Mark Levine, who just recovered from COVID-19.
“These are well-resourced facilities that are 90 percent empty. And we have hospitals that are overflowing,” the Manhattan Democrat said.
“They’re going to have to loosen the criteria on the kind of coronavirus patients they can accept and there are a whole bunch of logical barriers that have to be loosened,” Levine said.
He complained that the Army and Navy are insisting on hand-picking and transporting a small number hospital patients to Javits and the Comfort.
“Hospitals should be be able to drop off patients there instead of having staff from Javits or Comfort come to pick them up,” he said.
Patients were being barred from transfer to either facility for sometimes trivial reasons, he complained.
“They were asking the hospitals to supply patients with five days of medication,” or else they couldn’t be transferred. “That’s unnecessary,” he said. “Both of these facilities have pharmacies.”
https://nypost.com/2020/04/09/usns-comfort-and-javits-center-mostly-empty-amid-coronavirus/

Chicago hospital phlebotomist: >30% tested have coronavirus antibody

A phlebotomist working at Roseland Community Hospital said Thursday that 30% to 50% of patients tested for the coronavirus have antibodies while only around 10% to 20% of those tested have the active virus.
Sumaya Owaynat, a phlebotomy technician, said she tests between 400 and 600 patients on an average day in the parking lot at Roseland Community Hospital. Drive-thru testing is from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m. each day. However, the hospital has a limited number of tests they can give per day.
Owaynat said the number of patients coming through the testing center who appear to have already had coronavirus and gotten over it is far greater than those who currently have the disease.
“A lot of people have high antibodies, which means they had the coronavirus but they don’t have it anymore and their bodies built the antibodies,” Owaynat told Chicago City Wire.
Antibodies in the bloodstream reveal that a person has already had the coronavirus and may be immune to contracting the virus again.
If accurate, this means the spread of the virus may have been underway in the Roseland community – and the state and country as a whole – prior to the issuance of stay at home orders and widespread business closures in mid-March which have crippled the national economy.
In addition, those who show signs of already having had the illness should be able to re-enter society — albeit with some modified social distancing measures in place — rather than sheltering at home as they are no longer in danger. Of those who contract the coronavirus, around 25 percent may be asymptomatic.
A recent study of 1,000 people in the Heinsberg District of Bonn, Germany found that 15% of the population had contracted the virus, many unknowingly and without symptoms.
Of those, only 0.37% died from COVID-19, a figure much lower than those previously cited.
In fact, Dr. Anthony Fauci recently decreased his projection of the number of deaths nationwide from the virus to 60,000 from the 100,000 he predicted just last week.
Labs have been ramping up production of antibody tests in recent days, and some are saying the testing will hasten the end of the crisis and help restore the economy and quality of life to the country at large.
Abbott Labs in particular, which developed a five-minute testing kit, is stepping up efforts to roll out more antibody testing kits.
Many are calling for the kits to be shipped to homes around the country to determine if people have already had the virus or not. Those receiving a positive result would be deemed safe to re-engage in the workforce as well as assist in efforts to help those most negatively affected by the virus.
Roseland Community Hospital, located on the far south side of Chicago, has 138 beds serving a majority minority population with over 96% of the community’s residents identifying as African-American.
In recent days, the White House has sounded the alarm saying early data show the black population is being affected to a higher degree by the virus.

Samsung Biologics, Vir Agree on Manufacturing for Covid-19 Antibodies

Samsung Biologics (207940.KS) and Vir Biotechnology, Inc. (Nasdaq: VIR) today announced a manufacturing agreement under which Samsung Biologics will perform large scale manufacturing services for Vir’s SARS-CoV-2 monoclonal antibody (mAb) program.
“We are proud to be working as a partner with Vir in their response to the global COVID-19 pandemic,” said Dr. Tae Han Kim, CEO of Samsung Biologics. “With millions of people being impacted by this virus, accessibility to effective treatment is paramount. Vir’s candidate molecules supported by Samsung Biologics’ production scale have the potential to bring hope to countless lives across nations suffering from COVID-19.”
Vir’s lead SARS-CoV-2 mAb development candidates, VIR-7831 and VIR-7832, have demonstrated high affinity for the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein and are highly potent in neutralizing SARS-CoV-2 in live-virus cellular assays. Vir plans to proceed directly into a phase 2 clinical trial within the next three to five months. Today’s agreement builds on Vir’s previously announced manufacturing agreement with WuXi Biologics (stock code: 2269.HK) and its letter of intent with Biogen, Inc. (Nasdaq: BIIB).
“Given the trajectory of the COVID-19 pandemic, our expectation is that there will be a significant need around the world for antibody therapies,” said George Scangos, Ph.D., CEO, Vir. “Accordingly, we are taking proactive steps to reserve large scale manufacturing capacity to be ready to move quickly with any of our antibody candidates that prove to be clinically safe and effective. We are pleased to partner with Samsung Biologics who share our commitment to work with exceptional speed to address this pandemic.”
Under the deal valued at approximately $362 million, Samsung Biologics is expected to commence its manufacturing as early as October with the first engineering run, with potential commercial batches to be manufactured starting in 2021 in Plant 3. The parties will continue to negotiate additional terms in a definitive agreement and will use best efforts to execute a definitive agreement before July 31, 2020.
https://www.biospace.com/article/releases/samsung-biologics-and-vir-biotechnology-enter-into-agreement-for-large-scale-manufacture-of-sars-cov-2-antibodies-for-potential-covid-19-treatment/

Bristol-Myers’ win in U.S. patent case against Gilead boosted to $1.2B

A federal judge increased to $1.2 billion the damages that Gilead Sciences Inc must pay to Bristol-Myers Squibb Co in a patent infringement case regarding technology for treating cancer.
The judgment was entered against Gilead’s Kite Pharma unit on its “counterclaims of non-infringement and invalidity”, according to a ruling by U.S. District Judge Philip Gutierrez.
The new total of $1.2 billion includes $778 million awarded by a federal jury in December plus enhanced damages of $389 million and a pre-judgment interest on the jury’s verdict in the amount of $32.8 million, the judge said in his ruling.
A jury in Los Angeles had awarded damages in December after finding that Yescarta, a treatment sold by Kite Pharma, infringed on a patent exclusively licensed by Bristol-Myers’ Juno Therapeutics division.
The patent at issue in the lawsuit, which Juno licenses from the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, relates to CAR T-cell immunotherapy for cancer.
CAR-T therapy involves a process of removing T cells from a patient’s immune system, engineering them to better identify and attack cancer cells and infusing them back into the patient.
Gilead maintained that Bristol-Myers is not entitled to any level of damages, adding it plans to appeal against the decision.
“We furthermore strongly believe that the judgment is legally unsupportable and will be reversed,” Gilead said in an emailed statement on Thursday.
“We look forward to addressing these issues on appeal,” it added.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/bristol-myers-win-u-patent-022707713.html

Three U.S. local governments to adopt coronavirus contact tracing app: MIT

Three U.S. local governments plan to sign deals this week to become the first to adopt a location tracking app aimed at preventing new outbreaks of the novel coronavirus, a spokesman for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology-led project said Thursday.
An additional 17 state and municipal governments are considering introducing the app in their communities as soon as in the next two weeks, said Ramesh Raskar, an associate professor at MIT, in an email exchange.
“These span all over the country, and include some of the largest U.S. cities to more remote vacation communities looking to protect themselves,” he said.
Raskar declined to specify the states, counties or cities nearing agreements but said they were expected to advocate for residents to voluntarily download the app, known as Private Kit.
He described the expected deals as a “letter of intent” for collaboration, training and support.
Two Massachusetts cities plan to compare the performance of Private Kit with health officials asking patients to recall recent contacts from memory, he said.
“There are specific communities where a human-based approach will have benefits and others where the technology enabled platform will provide greater efficiency and accuracy,” Raskar said.
Governments worldwide are evaluating Private Kit or similar technologies meant to aid the otherwise labor-intensive process of contact tracing, in which health officials must ask recent contacts of a person who has tested positive for the virus to self-quarantine or get tested.
Effective contact tracing will need to be in place before widely lifting stay-at-home orders that have crippled the global economy, health experts have said. European countries have partnered on the Pan-European Privacy Preserving Proximity Tracing initiative, following the successful use of app-based systems in some Asian countries.
But privacy concerns and technical limitations are among several hurdles the app-based systems face among Americans.

MIT researchers and their collaborators said Private Kit can log an individual’s movements without jeopardizing their privacy. Their system relies on Bluetooth signals dubbed “chirps,” which are communicated between phones of Private Kit users.
Healthcare officials would ask users who test positive for the coronavirus to anonymously publicize their phones’ recent “chirps.” Any Private Kit user whose phone was close enough to infected users to register their phones’ chirps would be alerted about their potential coronavirus exposure.
Researchers at Stanford University and the University of Southern California are among others developing location tracking apps, and some of the projects are being designed to work with the Private Kit app.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-app/three-u-s-local-governments-to-adopt-coronavirus-contact-tracing-app-mit-idUSKCN21R3PR