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Roche's RA Treatment, Actemra, Approved to Treat Seriously Ill COVID-19 Patients
Roche’s Actemra, first approved by the US FDA in 2010 for rheumatoid arthritis, was approved to treat coronavirus patients with serious disease and lung damage, according to new China guidelines for COVID-19 treatment. Actemra isn't intended to kill the coronavirus directly. Instead, it inhibits the interleukin 6 (IL-6) receptor, a proinflammatory cytokine, reducing the potentially lethal cytokine storm that affects seriously ill patients. In the 2003 SARS outbreak, a similar lung inflammation occured in patients. China will allow the use of Actemra in patients with elevated IL-6 levels, which was already being used as an indicator of worsening disease.
The new coronavirus is now called SARS-CoV-2, emphasizing its similarity to the SARS virus. Roche has donated $2 million of Actemra to China, to help patients suffering from serious disease.
According to Roche, a scientist at the Chinese Academy of Sciences said at a government press conference that promising results had been observed in 14 serious and critically ill patients treated with existing meds—including for arthritis—at a hospital affiliated with the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC). USTC scientists have begun a parallel trial that will enroll 188 patients, half of them randomized to receive Actemra.
USTC scientists have identified IL-6 as a main culprit in the immune overreaction among COVID-19 patients. In 2017, the US FDA also OK'd Actemra to treat cytokine release syndrome—another cytokine storm—caused by CAR-T treatment.
In 2019, Actemra revenues were $2.4 billion, ranking sixth among Roche’s top-selling drugs. Sanofi and Regeneron are also investigating the use of Kevzara, an FDA-approved anti-IL-6 receptor therapy for rheumatoid arthritis, to treat COVID-19.
See our other articles on Roche.
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