<p>The US biotech firm Regeneron said Tuesday its antibody cocktail against the coronavirus reduced viral load and recovery time in non-hospitalized Covid-19 patients during an early-stage clinical trial.</p>.<p>"We are highly encouraged by the robust and consistent nature of these initial data," said George Yancopoulos, the company's president and chief scientific officer.</p>.<p>"We have begun discussing our findings with regulatory authorities while continuing our ongoing trial," he added.</p>.<p>The results related to the first 275 patients recruited into Regeneron's Phase 1 trial. The patients were randomized to receive either a low-dose, high-dose or placebo of the drug, and they were also classed by whether their bodies had mounted their own antibody response or not.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/glaxosmithkline-ceo-optimistic-about-covid-19-vaccine-availablity-in-2021-895021.html" target="_blank">GlaxoSmithKline CEO optimistic about Covid-19 vaccine availablity in 2021</a></strong></p>.<p>The greatest treatment benefit was seen in patients who had not mounted their own effective immune response, which suggested the drug, called REGN-COV2, could act as a substitute in the absence of naturally occurring antibodies, according to Yancopoulos.</p>.<p>Regeneron said it would recruit 1,300 patients for the next stages of the outpatient trial. It is also concurrently running late-stage trials for hospitalized Covid-19 patients and for the drug's potential use as a prophylaxis.</p>.<p>Antibodies are infection-fighting proteins made by the immune system that can bind to particular structures on the surfaces of pathogens and prevent them from invading cells.</p>.<p>Vaccines work by teaching the body to make its own antibodies, while scientists are also testing ready-made antibodies from the blood of recovered patients, called convalescent plasma.</p>.<p>But it is not possible to make convalescent plasma a mass treatment.</p>.<p>Researchers can also comb through the antibodies produced by recovered patients and select the most effective out of thousands, and then manufacture it at scale.</p>.<p>Regeneron uses a multi-antibody strategy to decrease the chances that the virus will mutate in order to evade the blocking action of a single antibody, an approach the company detailed in a recent study in Science.</p>.<p>Last year, a triple-antibody cocktail developed by Regeneron was shown to be effective against the Ebola virus.</p>.<p>Also on Tuesday, the biotech firm Moderna -- one of the frontrunners in the race to develop a Covid-19 vaccine -- reported results from the Phase 1 portion of its clinical trial that showed its drug was safe and generated a strong immune response among a group of 40 older adults.</p>.<p>Moderna's Phase 3 trial, the final phase before possible approval, is also underway and could report interim results by the end of the year.</p>
<p>The US biotech firm Regeneron said Tuesday its antibody cocktail against the coronavirus reduced viral load and recovery time in non-hospitalized Covid-19 patients during an early-stage clinical trial.</p>.<p>"We are highly encouraged by the robust and consistent nature of these initial data," said George Yancopoulos, the company's president and chief scientific officer.</p>.<p>"We have begun discussing our findings with regulatory authorities while continuing our ongoing trial," he added.</p>.<p>The results related to the first 275 patients recruited into Regeneron's Phase 1 trial. The patients were randomized to receive either a low-dose, high-dose or placebo of the drug, and they were also classed by whether their bodies had mounted their own antibody response or not.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/glaxosmithkline-ceo-optimistic-about-covid-19-vaccine-availablity-in-2021-895021.html" target="_blank">GlaxoSmithKline CEO optimistic about Covid-19 vaccine availablity in 2021</a></strong></p>.<p>The greatest treatment benefit was seen in patients who had not mounted their own effective immune response, which suggested the drug, called REGN-COV2, could act as a substitute in the absence of naturally occurring antibodies, according to Yancopoulos.</p>.<p>Regeneron said it would recruit 1,300 patients for the next stages of the outpatient trial. It is also concurrently running late-stage trials for hospitalized Covid-19 patients and for the drug's potential use as a prophylaxis.</p>.<p>Antibodies are infection-fighting proteins made by the immune system that can bind to particular structures on the surfaces of pathogens and prevent them from invading cells.</p>.<p>Vaccines work by teaching the body to make its own antibodies, while scientists are also testing ready-made antibodies from the blood of recovered patients, called convalescent plasma.</p>.<p>But it is not possible to make convalescent plasma a mass treatment.</p>.<p>Researchers can also comb through the antibodies produced by recovered patients and select the most effective out of thousands, and then manufacture it at scale.</p>.<p>Regeneron uses a multi-antibody strategy to decrease the chances that the virus will mutate in order to evade the blocking action of a single antibody, an approach the company detailed in a recent study in Science.</p>.<p>Last year, a triple-antibody cocktail developed by Regeneron was shown to be effective against the Ebola virus.</p>.<p>Also on Tuesday, the biotech firm Moderna -- one of the frontrunners in the race to develop a Covid-19 vaccine -- reported results from the Phase 1 portion of its clinical trial that showed its drug was safe and generated a strong immune response among a group of 40 older adults.</p>.<p>Moderna's Phase 3 trial, the final phase before possible approval, is also underway and could report interim results by the end of the year.</p>