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Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Study underway assessing treatments for critically ill COVID-19 patients

The first patient has been dosed in a 1,500-subject Phase 2 platform study, I-SPY COVID, evaluating repurposed and investigational drugs in critically ill COVID-19 patients.

The trial will assess Gilead Sciences’ (NASDAQ:GILD) Veklury (remdesivir), AbbVie’s (NYSE:ABBV) cenicriviroc, Takeda’s (NYSE:TAK) Firazyr (icatibant), Amgen’s (NASDAQ:AMGN) Otezla (apremilast) and Aerpio Pharmaceuticals’ (NASDAQ:ARPO) razuprotafib.

The least familiar may be razuprotafib (AKB-9778) which inhibits an enzyme called vascular endothelial protein tyrosine phosphatase (VE-PTP) that down-regulates a protein called Tie2. Decreased Tie2 activity is associated with vascular instability in many diseases so inhibiting VE-PTP helps maintain a high activity level of Tie2.

All participants will start with high-flow oxygen via nasal prongs or mask and will be asked to sign a consent form for the backbone therapy and a specific investigational arm to which they are assigned.

The primary endpoint will be the time to recover to a durable level 4 (or less) on the WHO ordinal scale for clinical improvement. Level 4 patients are those with mild disease, hospitalized and needing supplemental oxygen. Level 0 are patients who have recovered, showing no clinical or virological signs of infection.


Cats point the way to potential COVID-19 remedies

Last week, Gilead Sciences said it would test its COVID-19 drug remdesivir against a related compound in its library called GS-441524 in animal trials, after facing scrutiny over the latter drug, which has been used for years to treat feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) despite not being licensed for that use.

Now, another California biotech, Anivive Lifesciences, is working on a COVID-19 antiviral drug that’s inspired by cats, and it has new preclinical research findings to back up the project.

Scientists led by the University of Alberta reported that a drug developed to treat a coronavirus that can cause FIP inhibited the main protease of both SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2. That prevented the human coronaviruses from replicating in cell cultures, they reported in the journal Nature Communications.

Anivive originally licensed the drug, called GC376, from Kansas State University in 2018 and has been working since then to develop it as an antiviral to treat FIP, a progressive disease in cats that’s often caused by a coronavirus and is fatal if left untreated. Last month, Anivive said it had started two preclinical studies to determine whether GC376 could also treat COVID-19.


GC376 was designed to inhibit a protease called 3C, which promotes the replication of several coronaviruses that infect animals and people. They include feline coronavirus (FCoV), which usually causes mild symptoms in cats but can lead to FIP.

Two pilot studies of GC376 in pet cats infected with FIP showed that the drug was effective against the disease within two weeks and was well tolerated. Anivive is currently scaling up production of the drug for larger studies in cats.

For the new study, the University of Alberta team tested both GC376 and its parent drug, GC373, for their ability to inhibit the 3C protease. Both drugs blocked viral replication, they reported.

The authors acknowledged that vaccines against COVID-19 are advancing rapidly, but they suggested antiviral drugs are still necessary in the short term. SARS-CoV-2 “is a virus with a significant mutation rate. Also, in some patients the virus has persisted longer than 2 months with some possibility of re-infection,” they wrote in the study.

M. Joanne Lemieux, Ph.D., professor of structural biology at the University of Alberta, pointed out in an interview with Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News that GC376 could be advanced rapidly into human trials, given its track record in veterinary medicine.

“Because this drug has already been used to treat cats with coronavirus, and it’s effective with little to no toxicity, it’s already passed [preclinical] stages, and this allows us to move forward,” Lemieux said.


Clinical failure or course correction? Gilead’s NASH programs could be both

2019 was not a good year for Gilead’s fatty liver programs. Its lead prospect did worse than placebo in not one, but two, phase 3 studies, while its combination treatments also fell short in phase 2. It’s not letting those efforts go to waste, though—in studies presented at this year’s virtual International Liver Congress, Gilead and partner PathAI suggest improvements to NASH drug development.

Those include the development of combination treatments for nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), as well as the use of machine learning methods to assess liver biopsy images, currently the gold standard for diagnosing NASH.

Gilead presented full data from ATLAS, a phase 2b study that tested firsocostat, an ACC inhibitor, and cilofexor, an FXR agonist, alone and in combination with each other, as well as with selonsertib, the ASK1 inhibitor that failed two phase 3 studies last year. The main takeaway did not change from the topline reveal last December—none of the treatments or combos beat placebo at reducing liver scarring as measured by biopsy—but the company did share a few more details.

The cilofexor-firsocostat combination performed the best on the primary endpoint, cutting liver scarring without worsening of NASH in 21% of patients with advanced fibrosis, but it did not beat placebo by a wide enough margin to be considered a success. Rohit Loomba, M.D., who presented the results said that might be a result to the small study size.


Drilling down, the study found the cilofexor-firsocostat combination did “significantly better” than placebo at reducing liver stiffness. After 48 weeks of treatment, 45% of patients taking the combo saw a 25% drop in liver stiffness measured by FibroScan, an ultrasound-based test, versus 20% of placebo patients. It also beat placebo at reducing biomarkers of fatty liver, including elevated liver enzymes and bile acids, as well as reducing liver inflammation (57% versus 29%), leading the investigators to suggest “future studies of combination therapies for advanced fibrosis due to NASH are warranted.”

“There are two main reasons we think the combination approach may be optimal for this disease,” said Rob Myers, M.D., who leads fiver fibrosis clinical research at Gilead. “The first is the biology of the disease—there are multiple pathways at play; it is not simply a disease caused by one insult like a virus… The second reason is the NASH patient population is quite heterogenous and therefore it is likely that compounds that target one mechanism are more likely to benefit one population, while another mechanism might be better in a different population.”


Beyond pursuing treatments that hit multiple drivers of NASH, drugmakers in the space could benefit from improvements to liver biopsy. It’s no secret that liver biopsy is a subjective measure of disease—a pathologist’s findings depend on which part of the liver the sample was taken from and on the pathologist’s own experience. What’s more, findings can differ between pathologists and even the same pathologist can turn up different results on different days.

Gilead and PathAI are working on machine learning approaches that can take this variability out of liver biopsy. The duo presented multiple posters showing that PathAI’s models could accurately and reproducibly assess markers of liver disease in biopsy images and predict which patients are likely to see their disease worsen.

The models aren’t designed to solve other downsides of biopsy, such as their invasive nature, or the fact that they only consider a narrow slice of the liver: “We can’t solve the invasive part,” PathAI CEO Andy Beck said. “But we can extract as much medically useful information from each biopsy as possible using machine learning.”

“In the context of ATLAS, the evaluated rates of fibrosis improvement based on central pathologists’ reading were not statistically significant… Using machine learning approaches, we were able to see a significant reduction in fibrosis, as well as a shift from advanced fibrosis patterns to less advanced fibrosis patterns,” Myers said.

“It suggests we are indeed seeing a regression of fibrosis that perhaps is not being picked up by conventional staging because of insensitivity,” he added.


Gilead and PathAI hope to get machine learning approaches approved for use in clinical trials. They’re already using such models, of course, but regulators still use traditional biopsy—that is, images read by humans—as the endpoint in NASH studies.

PathAI is working with industry partners and the FDA to work toward incorporating machine learning in those NASH endpoints, Beck said. He hopes that machine learning will become the new standard for how pathology is measured within the next couple of years.

As for Gilead’s NASH pipeline, the company is testing the cilofexor-firsocostat combo in tandem with Novo Nordisk’s GLP-1 drug semaglutide.

“We continue to analyze the data from the ATLAS study, as well as other ongoing studies we have, for example, our study collaboration with Novo Nordisk,” Myers said. “We continue to evaluate those data and discuss with regulators the optimal path forward for these therapies.”


NIH: Convalescent Plasma Shouldn’t Be Seen As Covid-19 Standard Of Care

NIH SAYS THERE ARE INSUFFICIENT DATA TO RECOMMEND EITHER FOR OR AGAINST THE USE OF CONVALESCENT PLASMA FOR THE TREATMENT OF COVID-19

* NIH SAYS CONVALESCENT PLASMA SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED THE STANDARD OF CARE FOR THE TREATMENT OF PATIENTS WITH COVID-19

* NIH-PROSPECTIVE,WELL-CONTROLLED,ADEQUATELY POWERED RANDOMIZED TRIALS NEEDED TO DETERMINE WHETHER CONVALESCENT PLASMA EFFECTIVE FOR COVID-19 TREATMENT Source text : https://bit.ly/2EUK1kW


Roche to launch rapid coronavirus antigen test in CE Mark countries

Roche (OTCQX:RHHBY +1.8%) plans to launch its SARS-CoV-2 Rapid Antigen Test later this month in markets that accept CE Mark certification.

It expects to file for emergency use authorization in the U.S.

The point-of-care chromatographic assay can generate a result in 15 minutes without the need for instrumentation. The company says it has 96.5% sensitivity and 99.7% specificity based on 426 nasopharyngeal swab samples from two independent study centers.

At launch, production volume will be 40M units per month which will ramp to more than 80M per month by year-end.


Florida lifting ban on nursing home visits

Florida will lift a ban on nursing home visits that had been in place since March to mitigate the spread of the coronavirus, Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) said Tuesday. 

DeSantis said officials weighed the risks of visitation against “the certain harm of prolonged isolation.” 

The governor said he will be lifting the ban in an executive order later Tuesday, adding that he is following recommendations from a nursing home task force that met in recent weeks, according to The Associated Press

The task force recommended that no more than two family members, wearing protective gear including masks, be allowed to visit residents at a time. Facilities would also need to go 14 days without any new cases of COVID-19 among staff or residents to allow the visits, according to the AP. 

Florida Agency for Health Care Administration Secretary Mary Mayhew, who led the task force, reportedly said that 62 percent of the state’s facilities have not had a new case since Aug. 11. 

Florida has had one of the worst outbreaks of the coronavirus in the U.S., reporting more than 623,000 COVID-19 cases and 11,187 related deaths, according to state data.

DeSantis did not impose statewide face mask requirements, but has allowed local leaders to make such mandates.


SARS-CoV-2 vax candidate likely match for all currently circulating variants

View ORCID ProfileBethany Dearlove, View ORCID ProfileEric Lewitus, View ORCID ProfileHongjun Bai, View ORCID ProfileYifan Li, View ORCID ProfileDaniel B. Reeves, View ORCID ProfileM. Gordon Joyce, Paul T. Scott, View ORCID ProfileMihret F. Amare, View ORCID ProfileSandhya Vasan, View ORCID ProfileNelson L. Michael, View ORCID ProfileKayvon Modjarrad, and View ORCID ProfileMorgane Rolland

PNAS first published August 31, 2020 https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2008281117


Significance


The rapid spread of the virus causing COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, raises questions about the possibility of a universally effective vaccine. The virus can mutate in a given individual, and these variants can be propagated across populations and time. To understand this process, we analyze 18,514 SARS-CoV-2 sequences sampled since December 2019. We find that neutral evolution, rather than adaptive selection, can explain the rare mutations seen across SARS-CoV-2 genomes. In the immunogenic Spike protein, the D614G mutation has become consensus, yet there is no evidence of mutations affecting binding to the ACE2 receptor. Our results suggest that, to date, the limited diversity seen in SARS-CoV-2 should not preclude a single vaccine from providing global protection.

Abstract


The magnitude of the COVID-19 pandemic underscores the urgency for a safe and effective vaccine. Many vaccine candidates focus on the Spike protein, as it is targeted by neutralizing antibodies and plays a key role in viral entry. Here we investigate the diversity seen in severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) sequences and compare it to the sequence on which most vaccine candidates are based. Using 18,514 sequences, we perform phylogenetic, population genetics, and structural bioinformatics analyses. We find limited diversity across SARS-CoV-2 genomes: Only 11 sites show polymorphisms in >5% of sequences; yet two mutations, including the D614G mutation in Spike, have already become consensus. Because SARS-CoV-2 is being transmitted more rapidly than it evolves, the viral population is becoming more homogeneous, with a median of seven nucleotide substitutions between genomes. There is evidence of purifying selection but little evidence of diversifying selection, with substitution rates comparable across structural versus nonstructural genes. Finally, the Wuhan-Hu-1 reference sequence for the Spike protein, which is the basis for different vaccine candidates, matches optimized vaccine inserts, being identical to an ancestral sequence and one mutation away from the consensus. While the rapid spread of the D614G mutation warrants further study, our results indicate that drift and bottleneck events can explain the minimal diversity found among SARS-CoV-2 sequences. These findings suggest that a single vaccine candidate should be efficacious against currently circulating lineages.