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Saturday, November 20, 2021

Stillbirth Risk Spiked With Delta

 For pregnant women with COVID-19 during the Delta period, the risk for stillbirth was four times higher if they had their diagnosis at delivery while mortality was increased fivefold in a small study from Mississippi, according to two CDC reports.

From March 2020 to September 2021, the risk for stillbirth was 90% higher among women who had a COVID-19 diagnosis at delivery versus those who did not, with a huge difference between the pre-Delta (adjusted relative risk [aRR] 1.47, 95% CI 1.27-1.71) and Delta period starting in July 2021 (aRR 4.04, 95% CI 3.28-4.97), reported Carla L. DeSisto, PhD, of the CDC, and colleagues, writing in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR).

A second MMWR report by Laurin Kasehagen, PhD, of the CDC, and colleagues, showed that the COVID-19 mortality rate among pregnant women in Mississippi increased from 5 per 1,000 infections (95% CI 1.7-10.3) in the pre-Delta period to 25 per 1,000 infections (95% CI 11.3-46.8) during Delta.

Stillbirth Risk

For their study, DeSisto's group analyzed the Premier Healthcare Database Special COVID-19 Release, identifying 1.24 million deliveries at 736 hospitals from March 2020 to September 2021.

Overall, there were 8,154 stillbirths, with 273 occurring among 21,653 deliveries involving patients with a COVID-19 diagnosis at delivery (1.26%) and 7,881 among the 1.22 million deliveries without such a diagnosis (0.64%).

The researchers were unable to assess vaccination status in the analysis. However, they noted that because only 30% of pregnant people were vaccinated by July, it is likely that the vast majority were unvaccinated.

"Although stillbirth was a rare outcome overall, a COVID-19 diagnosis documented during the delivery hospitalization was associated with an increased risk for stillbirth," wrote DeSisto and colleagues, "with a stronger association during the period of Delta variant predominance."

Kjersti Aagaard, MD, PhD, a professor of ob/gyn at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, who was not involved in the study, told MedPage Today by email that the effects of Delta still need to be further examined due to the strain on healthcare systems during this time period, citing how lack of available hospital beds or other care limitations could have played a role in the findings as well.

Still, she said, vaccination against COVID-19 in the pregnant population is the best prevention strategy, and has the potential to reduce not only maternal disease severity and death, but also stillbirth.

"It is rare that we can offer solutions for the prevention of stillbirth," Aagaard said. "In this case, we can."

In the study, a higher risk for stillbirth among deliveries with COVID-19 was also seen when certain comorbidities or other factors played a part, including chronic hypertension, a multiple gestation pregnancy, an adverse cardiac event, placental abruption, sepsis, shock, acute respiratory distress syndrome, mechanical ventilation, and ICU admission. The associations for adverse cardiac events and ICU admission were stronger during the Delta period.

Approximately 15% of the pregnant patients had obesity, 11% had diabetes, 17% had a hypertensive disorder, 2% had multiple gestation pregnancies, and 5% smoked tobacco.

The authors noted several limitations, including the reliance on administrative data, whether the documented COVID-19 diagnosis was a past or current infection, and the possibility that mothers with more severe cases were tested due to a lack of universal COVID-19 screening.

Increased Mortality in Pregnancy

Kasehagen's group analyzed COVID-19 case and death data from the Mississippi State Department of Health from March 2020 to October 2021, finding 15 COVID-19-associated deaths among 1,637 pregnant people infected with SARS-CoV-2, for a mortality rate of 9 per 1,000 infections.

Of the 15 pregnant women who died, six died in the pre-Delta period (March 2020 to June 2021) and nine died in the Delta period (July to October 2021). Median age of the decedents was 30 years old. Median time from symptom onset to death was 18 days, both before and after Delta's arrival. All but one of the pregnant patients had underlying medical conditions. Nine of the 15 women were non-Hispanic Black, three were white, and three were Hispanic.

"CDC recommends COVID-19 vaccination for pregnant women to prevent serious illness, death, and adverse pregnancy outcomes from COVID-19," Kasehagen's group wrote. "Given existing disparities in vaccination rates among pregnant women, partnerships to address vaccine access, hesitancy, or other concerns about vaccination can enhance fair and just access to COVID-19 vaccination, including among Black persons and Hispanic persons."

All patients who died were admitted to the ICU, and all but one were put on mechanical ventilation. Seven of the patients had an emergency C-section, and three died during their pregnancy. One of the patients who died during pregnancy had a spontaneous abortion at 9 weeks' gestation, and two had stillbirths at 22 and 23 weeks of pregnancy. Twelve of the pregnant women died after birth, with the deaths occurring at a median 5 days' postpartum.

None of the patients received monoclonal antibodies and none were fully vaccinated (one was partially vaccinated). Five of the deaths occurred before COVID-19 vaccines became available in December 2020.

Limitations of the study included the difficulty of identifying pregnancy-related mortality via death certificates and potential underestimates in COVID-19 reporting systems. Also, because of the small number of deaths, the researchers did not determine statistical significance of the mortality rate differences between the pre-Delta and Delta time periods.


Disclosures

DeSisto and colleagues did not disclose any potential conflicts of interest.

Kasehagen's group also did not report any relevant relationships with industry.

Will 'Vaccine or Test' Mandate Survive?

 Surveys

Will 'Vaccine or Test' Mandate Survive?

Amid a host of court challenges, the Biden administration has temporarily suspended enforcement of its "vaccine or test" mandate for businesses with 100 or more employees

Medpagetoday.com surveys are polls of those who choose to participate and are, therefore, not valid statistical samples, but rather a snapshot of what your colleagues are thinking.



Will Biden's workplace mandate survive in the courts?

ToppingSlices
Yes16
No20

Merck Completes Tender Offer to Acquire Acceleron

 Merck (NYSE: MRK), known as MSD outside the United States and Canada, today announced the successful completion of the cash tender offer, through a subsidiary, Astros Merger Sub, Inc., for all of the outstanding shares of common stock of Acceleron Pharma Inc. (Nasdaq: XLRN), at a purchase price of $180 per share in cash, without interest and less applicable tax withholding. As of the tender offer expiration at 5:00 p.m., Eastern Time, on Nov. 19, 2021, 38,752,614 shares of common stock of Acceleron were validly tendered and not withdrawn from the tender offer, representing approximately 63.3% of the total number of Acceleron’s outstanding shares. All such shares have been accepted for payment in accordance with the terms of the tender offer, and Astros Merger Sub, Inc. expects to promptly pay for such shares.

Merck intends to complete the acquisition of Acceleron through a merger of Astros Merger Sub, Inc. with and into Acceleron, with Acceleron being the surviving corporation, in which all shares not tendered into the offer will be cancelled and converted into the right to receive cash equal to the $180 offer price per share, without interest and less any applicable tax withholding. After the completion of the merger, Acceleron will become a wholly owned subsidiary of Merck and the common stock of Acceleron will no longer be listed or traded on the Nasdaq Global Market.

https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20211119005769/en/Merck-Completes-Tender-Offer-to-Acquire-Acceleron-Pharma-Inc.

8 lingering questions about new Covid pills from Merck and Pfizer

 The past two months have brought extremely good news in the fight against Covid-19. Two different oral treatments have proved effective at both preventing people newly diagnosed with Covid-19 from entering the hospital and from dying.

“We’re accelerating our path out of this pandemic,” President Biden said after data on the second Covid pill became available. The wide availability of oral drugs could make Covid-19 less lethal, making it less risky for people to return to in-person work and to their normal lives.

The first results, from Merck and Ridgeback Therapeutics, were released in October and will be considered by an advisory panel to the Food and Drug Administration in December. That could lead to an emergency use authorization in the U.S. by the end of the year. That drug, molnupiravir, reduced hospitalizations by 50% and prevented deaths entirely a large randomized clinical trial when it was given within five days of when symptoms began. The pill is given as a five-day course during which patients take a total of 40 pills.

In November, Pfizer announced that its Covid pill, Paxlovid, reduced hospitalizations by 89% and also prevented deaths in its own large randomized study. As with the Merck drug, Paxlovid is given as a five-day course. It must be given with a second medicine, a booster, called ritonavir, which is made by AbbVie, another large drug firm. The Pfizer regimen involves taking 30 pills over a five-day period.

Though the topline results are similar, the medicines could have different risks and benefits. The companies have only issued data in press releases, not scientific articles, and doctors need to know a lot more about both. Here is an overview of what we still don’t know about the Covid pills and when we might learn it.

Which one works better?

At the headline level, Pfizer’s pill reduced the risk of hospitalization and death by 89%, while Merck showed a reduction of 50%. But neither firm has disclosed detailed data from its pivotal studies, and the trials were not identically designed.

The studies enrolled similar populations — unvaccinated people with mild to moderate Covid-19 and at least one risk factor for severe disease — but they had slightly different measures of efficacy. Pfizer’s 89% figure comes from patients who started getting its pill, Paxlovid, within three days of their first Covid-19 symptoms. Merck’s 50% applies to patients who began treatment within five days. In the Paxlovid study, patients who started treatment within five days saw an 85% improvement in hospitalization or death versus placebo. Merck has not shared data on patients who got its drug within three days of symptom onset.

What the studies had in common was 100% efficacy against death, regardless of when patients started treatment. Merck’s study counted eight deaths among patients on placebo, and Pfizer’s observed 10.

On the safety side, the rate of side effects in both studies was similar between the treatment groups and placebo groups. In each study, fewer patients in the treatment group left the study due to side effects compared to those in the placebo group. Neither company has disclosed detailed data on the type and severity of side effects.

Each treatment is administered twice a day for five total days, amounting to 10 doses in total. Pfizer’s drug is co-administered with a common antiviral called ritonavir.

Would they work better in combination? And would the companies allow that to happen?

Theoretically, yes. And it’s unlikely.

Combinations of antiviral drugs are the standard treatment for people with HIV because it reduces the risk of resistance caused by mutations in the virus. Since the Pfizer and Merck pills attack SARS-CoV-2 differently, using them in combination might offer the same protective benefit for patients with Covid, said Céline Gounder, a physician and infectious disease expert at New York University’s Grossman School of Medicine.

“The challenge is that since these drugs are developed by different companies, neither Merck nor Pfizer is incentivized to run a combination therapy trial,” said Gounder. “However, the National Institutes of Health or others could do that, and I think it’s really important that they start to develop a combination therapy.”

Nahid Bhadelia, the founding director of the Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases Policy and Research at Boston University, also supports the idea of clinical trials to test combination treatments. Combination therapy is standard in HIV because patients are treated chronically — the virus is never fully cleared. SARS-CoV-2 is cleared in most people, but it’s also a faster-evolving virus.

“The patients that we see the most evolution in are immunocompromised who have prolonged infections with SARS-Cov-2,” she said.

In an interview with STAT after Pfizer’s data were announced, the company’s head of research and development, Mikael Dolsten, argued that Pfizer’s antiviral is potent enough to protect against new strains and already has strong efficacy, and that combining the drugs would only add the potential for more side effects.

Will the antiviral be available for vaccinated patients with breakthrough infections?

Both companies conducted their studies entirely in patients who were at high risk of complications if they caught Covid and who also had not been vaccinated. That leads to a big question for policymakers: Should those who have been vaccinated, but who develop a breakthrough infection of SARS-CoV-2, be given the pills?

Right now that is a question without data. A third antiviral pill, from the biotech firm Atea and the large drug firm Roche, failed to prove it was effective in its own study, and Wall Street analysts suspect the reason is that the companies included vaccinated patients in the research. For those who have received the vaccine, hospitalization and death are much less likely. This means that it is harder for a drug to show efficacy, because there are fewer infections to prevent.

So regulators and public health officials will have to make a judgement on the risks and benefits of the Covid pills for people with breakthrough infections — without direct data in these populations.

Pfizer is running a clinical trial, with results due next year, that does include vaccinated patients, and the company’s executives have expressed confidence based on the results so far that the treatment should work. Both Merck and Pfizer are also running studies to show that the drugs can prevent people from developing symptoms if they take the antivirals after they are exposed to the virus.

Do the drugs work the same way?

No, not really. While both drugs interfere with the process the coronavirus uses to reproduce itself, each drug interferes at a very different point.

Merck’s drug throws a wrench into the works quite early. After someone takes molnupiravir, the drug is transformed into something uncannily similar to one of RNA’s chemical building blocks.

The modification is so subtle that not only will the coronavirus use molnupiravir in place of other building blocks when it replicates itself, but coronaviruses’ unusual proofreading mechanism can’t even pick up on the imposter compound. Over time, the drug will encourage the virus to introduce even more mistakes.

“Ultimately, this leads to what’s known as error catastrophe. It’s introducing so many different mutations that, eventually, nothing further can happen,” said Katherine Seley-Radtke, a medicinal chemist at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. “You’ve got this completely mutated RNA.”

Pfizer’s drug, Paxlovid, acts at a completely different point in the virus’ reproductive process.

“It’s apples and oranges,” said Ronald Swanstrom, a biochemistry professor at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine.

Unlike molnupiravir, Paxlovid allows the strings of viral RNA to be assembled correctly. It even allows those strings to be used to create viral proteins, which are initially produced in one big chunk. Like a bolt of fabric before it’s cut to a clothing pattern, this protein needs to be chopped down to size before it can work.

That cutting is what Paxlovid prohibits. The drug is designed to bind to a particularly important point in an enzyme called a protease which slices up proteins. Without a functioning protease, the virus can’t create functional copies; no working virus, no problem.

Protease inhibitors have been used for decades to create more than a dozen drugs for HIV and hepatitis C; in some cases, they’ve also been used as cancer drugs.

“There’s a long history of medicinal chemistry targeting proteases,” said Bryan Dickinson, a chemical biologist at the University of Chicago.

Paxlovid is designed with a SARS-CoV-2-specific protease in mind, so it works more specifically on this coronavirus than molnupiravir.

But Paxlovid can’t work as well if it’s taken on its own. The body’s defense mechanisms will get rid of anything that it doesn’t recognize — including drugs, which can be digested by enzymes in a person’s liver. Another drug called ritonavir blocks the liver enzyme that would likely chew up Paxlovid, which gives the latter drug the space it needs to work.

How do they compare with monoclonal antibodies?

Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Eli Lilly have each won FDA authorization for antibody combination therapies that keep recently diagnosed Covid-19 patients from hospitalization and death. In a Phase 3 study enrolling recently diagnosed patients at high risk for severe disease, Regeneron’s treatment reduced the risk of hospitalization or death by 70% compared to placebo. In a similar study, Lilly’s therapy showed an 87% reduction.

The biggest difference is one of convenience. The antibody treatments are administered intravenously in a one-time, roughly hour-long process (Regeneron’s is authorized for subcutaneous injection when an IV procedure is not feasible). That could make the treatments from Pfizer and Merck, taken orally at home, preferable to patients unable to visit an infusion center.

There’s also a difference in cost. Regeneron and Lilly have signed deals with the federal government to sell their treatments at about $1,250 per dose. Merck’s agreement with the U.S. works out to about $700 for a five-day course of molnupiravir. Pfizer is still negotiating contracts but is expected to set a similar price for Paxlovid.

How easy will they be to get?

A pill is a huge leap in terms of logistical ease over infused therapies like monoclonal antibodies. For those treatments, not only did people have to make their way to clinics for their infusions, but hospitals and other facilities had to set up places where people who were actively infectious could come get treated without risking others’ health. (The other antiviral authorized to treat Covid-19, Gilead’s remdesivir, is an infusion and approved only for hospitalized patients, but some data indicate that if it were to be given to patients earlier in their infections, it could have a greater effect. If its approval ever covered outpatients, however, it would still run into the same logistical challenges of an infused therapy.)

Still, the Covid pills come with a key challenge of their own. They’re most effective when given early in the infection, so people need to be able to get tested and get their prescription rapidly. And the U.S. testing landscape is still limited. PCR tests can take days to return a result, and though the Biden administration has upped its effort to expand the availability of at-home rapid tests, finding one at a store is still hit or miss — success feels like scoring this holiday season’s hottest gift. Any delay in getting diagnosed undercuts the power of these pills; even a day or two has real implications for a treatment meant to clear out an acute infection like Covid-19.

Will it affect a patient’s DNA?

This is really a question only for Merck’s molnupiravir, since it works by sneaking subtly corrupted parts into the coronavirus’s RNA sequence.

Once the virus has mutated too much, it can’t work — mission accomplished. But there’s a theoretical chance that molnupiravir could also influence normal human DNA when it replicates, too. If mutations happen during that process, it could spell real trouble.

Merck did some tests during molnupiravir’s development to check this possibility out. In two different types of animal studies using higher and longer doses than are given to humans, Merck’s scientists didn’t see any increased risk of unwanted mutations.

“We are very confident in the safety profile of molnupiravir based on our preclinical and clinical data,” executive vice president Dean Li told investors in an October conference call, according to a transcript in the financial database Sentieo.

But UNC’s Swanstrom isn’t completely convinced that the tests Merck did were sensitive enough. In August, he and his colleagues published a paper in the Journal of Infectious Diseases showing that a key metabolite of molnupiravir could mutate DNA in animal cells.

Given these results, Swanstrom said he would be particularly interested in seeing a long-term study of people who took molnupiravir to continue to monitor this potential effect over the next 10 or 20 years.

“This thing is going to go into thousands of people. And are we just going to ignore the fact that there’s this potential risk?” he said. “The risk could be zero. It could be no worse than going to get a dental X-ray — or it could do something more. But unless we find out, you know, we’re going to learn this lesson the hard way, way later than we should.”

What might the new antivirals mean for cancer patients?

Because the new antiviral Pfizer is developing is a protease inhibitor, infectious disease specialists are familiar with how it works. So we already know: These drugs have the potential to interfere with many therapies used to treat cancer, Tobias Hohl, chief of the infectious diseases service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, told STAT.

“They’re going to be very helpful [in our] armamentarium, but they will not substitute for prevention or vaccination efforts because these are not medicines that are completely benign and harmless in terms of their drug-drug interactions and toxicity,” he said. “So we’re going to have to be careful and thoughtful about how we use our protease inhibitors.”

https://www.statnews.com/2021/11/15/8-lingering-questions-about-the-new-covid-pills-from-merck-and-pfizer/

Rodents could be asymptomatic carriers of SARS-like coronaviruses

 Some ancestral rodents likely had repeated infections with SARS-like coronaviruses, leading them to acquire tolerance or resistance to the pathogens, according to new research publishing November 18th in PLOS Computational Biology by Sean King and Mona Singh of Princeton University, US. This raises the possibility that modern rodents may be reservoirs of SARS-like viruses, the researchers say.

SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19 , is of zoonotic origin—it jumped from a non-human animal to humans. Previous research has shown that Chinese Horseshoe bats are a host of numerous SARS-like viruses and tolerate these viruses without extreme symptoms. Identifying other animals that have adapted tolerance mechanisms to coronaviruses is important for awareness of potential viral reservoirs that can spread new pathogens to humans.

In the new research, King and Singh performed an evolutionary analysis, across , of the ACE2 receptors, used by SARS viruses to gain entry into mammalian cells. Primates had highly conserved sequences of amino acids in the sites of the ACE2 receptor known to bind SARS viruses. Rodents, however, had a greater diversity—and an accelerated rate of evolution—in these spots. Overall, the results indicated that SARS-like infections have not been evolutionary drivers in primate history, but that some  have likely been exposed to repeated SARS-like coronavirus infections for a considerable evolutionary period.

"Our study suggests that ancestral rodents may have had repeated infections with SARS-like coronaviruses and have acquired some form of tolerance or resistance to SARS-like coronaviruses as a result of these infections," the authors add. "This raises the tantalizing possibility that some modern  species may be asymptomatic carriers of SARS-like coronaviruses, including those that may not have been discovered yet."


Explore further

Scientists identify new antibody for COVID-19 and variants

More information: King SB, Singh M (2021) Comparative genomic analysis reveals varying levels of mammalian adaptation to coronavirus infections. PLoS Comput Biol 17(11): e1009560. doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009560
https://phys.org/news/2021-11-rodents-asymptomatic-carriers-sars-like-coronaviruses.html

Minnesota COVID-19 hospitalizations top 1,400 amid surge

 


 The number of Minnesota patients hospitalized with COVID-19 has surpassed 1,400 for the first time since last December, before vaccines became available, according to figures released Friday.

According to state health department statistics, Minnesota hospitals were caring for 1,414 patients with complications of the coronavirus, including 340 patients in intensive care. Only 2% of adult intensive care unit beds were free, and 56 hospitals reported that their adult ICU beds were at capacity. Pediatric ICU bed space also was tight at 92% capacity as of Thursday.

The influx of new patients came as Minnesota reported another 5,162 new infections and 30 additional deaths. The new infections bring the state’s case total to 871,203, with more than 9,500 residents testing positive more than once.

Gov. Tim Walz’s office said the federal government’s move Friday to open up COVID-19 booster shots to all adults means about 1.7 million Minnesota adults who have not yet gotten a booster are now eligible.

“Boosters are an important part of keeping protection against COVID-19 high in adults and helping to mitigate some of the intense COVID-19 spread we are seeing right now, which is extremely important given our tight hospital capacity,” Health Commissioner Jan Malcolm said in a statement.

Minnesota continues to have one of the highest rates of infection in the nation, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The testing positivity rate has risen to 10.8%. An average of over 10% is considered “high risk.”

“We are still very, very concerned about our numbers,” state infectious disease director Kris Ehresmann told the Minnesota Academy of Family Physicians on Thursday.

Case counts have not reached the levels seen last fall, when Minnesota hospitals saw a record 1,864 COVID-19 patients in late November.

But hospital executives across the state said COVID-19 patients, combined with other care needs, are overwhelming short-staffed care centers. Hospitals in this wave are seeing more people needing treatment for other illnesses, along with people who delayed getting care over the past year and a half.

Minnesota schools are closely monitoring the surge. Shakopee Public Schools canceled classes for Monday and Tuesday, effectively extending the Thanksgiving holiday break. School leaders hope the time away for students helps bring down cases.

https://apnews.com/article/coronavirus-pandemic-health-education-minnesota-4c547c72067961fd9ba9f2d2870ce778

Justices could rule on Texas abortion ban as soon as Monday

 The Supreme Court could rule as soon as Monday on Texas’ ban on abortion after roughly six weeks.

The justices are planning to issue at least one opinion Monday, the first of its new term, the court said on its website Friday.

There’s no guarantee the two cases over the Texas law, with its unique enforcement design that has so far evaded judicial review, will be resolved Monday. Those cases were argued Nov. 1, and the court also is working on decisions in the nine cases the justices heard in October.

But the court put the Texas cases on a rarely used fast track, raising expectations that decisions would come sooner than the months the justices usually spend writing and revising their opinions. The law has been in effect since Sept. 1.

With Thanksgiving approaching, Monday also is probably the last day the court could decide the Texas cases before the justices hear arguments Dec. 1 over whether to reverse nearly 50 years of precedents and hold that the Constitution does not guarantee the right to an abortion. The case is about Mississippi’s ban on abortion after 15 weeks.

The Texas law bans abortion once cardiac activity is detected in the fetus, often around six weeks, before some women know they’re pregnant, and it makes no exceptions for rape or incest. Six weeks is long before the court’s previous major abortion rulings allow states to prohibit abortion.

The focus at the Supreme Court, though, is over the design of the Texas law, which deputizes private citizens to enforce it by filing lawsuits against clinics, doctors and others who facilitate abortions. The court is trying to sort out who can sue to challenge the law and whether a federal court can effectively block the law from being enforced.

Even though the justices have returned to the courtroom for arguments following a 19-month hiatus because of the coronavirus pandemic, decisions will continue to be posted on the court’s website rather than summarized aloud in the courtroom.

The longstanding tradition of recapping opinions from the bench has produced some notable moments of drama over the years, especially from justices who are reading from their impassioned dissents in major cases.

The building remains closed to the public, with only a handful of outsiders — lawyers who are arguing their case and reporters who regularly cover the court — allowed in the courtroom.

https://apnews.com/article/coronavirus-pandemic-us-supreme-court-health-texas-2b7039e03a1cf0a162587c6ea215f224