A Valuable COVID Drug Doesn’t Work against New Variants - if In Doubt, Why Not Ask R' Shmuel Kamenetzky? (The Polio Vaccine Maven)
Current monoclonal antibodies fail against COVID virus variants, so drugmakers want to use a fast-track test for new ones
Aaron E. Glatt, MD, MACP, FIDSA, FSHEA, |
That happy result couldn’t occur today. Although millions of people with COVID have been successfully treated with these antibodies during the past two years, the evolution of the virus has now rendered them practically useless because they don’t block new subvariants such as BQ.1.1, which is currently dominant in the U.S. In November the U.S. Food and Drug Administration revoked its authorization of the last COVID monoclonal antibody on the market, bebtelovimab, leaving none available for therapy. Drug companies are working on updated versions. But whether these drugs will be available in a few months, rather than years, hinges on whether the FDA will accept fact-track data gathered during laboratory studies instead of large-scale clinical trials.
Monoclonal antibodies, or mAbs, are critical therapies for millions of people with immune system problems, who are at high risk of infection because their body does not respond effectively to vaccines. Organ transplant recipients and cancer patients treated with immune-suppressing drugs, for instance, “can't lead normal lives for fear of COVID,” says Myron Cohen, an infectious disease specialist at the University of North Carolina’s Gillings School of Global Public Health. The mAbs are also important for many who cannot take Paxlovid antiviral pills because the pills interact badly with their other medications, including those for cardiovascular problems and migraines.
To develop mAbs, scientists take recovered COVID patients’ immune cells and clone them. When the antibodies work, it’s because they bind to and hinder the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID, which the pathogen would otherwise use to enter cells. This binding ability, and the safety of mAbs, has been tested in the past through large clinical trials involving several thousand people.
During a December workshop co-hosted by the FDA and the European Medicines Agency, many scientists argued in favor of a quicker testing strategy called immunobridging. The idea is to show that new mAbs neutralize current variants in the lab at least as well as older mAbs vanquished earlier variants. “We’re at a point now where we can say that the capacity to neutralize SARS-CoV-2 correlates with protection against COVID disease in the real world,” says Robert Carnahan, a microbiologist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. “Large human studies are no longer needed to determine if a new mAb is efficacious. You just need to show it has antiviral activity. And you can do that in a test tube.” Combined with small human studies to rule out safety concerns and computer modeling to establish proper doses, these expedited processes could generate new mAbs for public use within three to five months, industry experts say.
Immunobridging already has an established history in the vaccine world. FDA regulators use it routinely when assessing new versions of the annual flu shot. The approach was also employed to authorize COVID boosters, as well as primary immunizations against the disease in younger age groups. This is the first time it would be used to evaluate a drug. The method has not been used for mAbs or other antiviral drugs, such as Paxlovid, because those medications do not act on immune responses but instead attack the virus directly.
One mAb therapy, called Evusheld, was authorized specifically for preexposure defense (called prophylaxis) in people with a compromised immune system. It initially provided long-lasting protection, yet its defense against current variants has waned. “Preexposure prophylaxis is something we don’t have a replacement for,” Glatt says. “And this is what I’m most concerned about.”
In an e-mail to Scientific American, an FDA spokesperson said the agency is concerned as well, and it will work with drug companies on expedited development of preventive therapies for immunosuppressed patients. But the FDA has not said when it will decide if immunobridging lab data will be sufficient for mAbs. Pharmaceutical makers are anxious for an answer. “We are working hard to get new mAbs available as quickly as we can in a scientifically sound and safe way,” says Christos Kyratsous, who heads infectious disease research at the biotech company Regeneron. “Obviously I wish were a moving a bit faster in terms of our interactions with regulators.” Still, he says, “I’m optimistic we can get there.”
did you write the music for achas shoalti?
ReplyDeleteYeah, "shocked". As if many of the retailers aren't in large part responsible for the price gouging themselves.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.koshertoday.com/retailers-concerned-about-inflation-supply-chain-issues-for-passover-2023
There is a growing concern amongst retailers that continued inflation will put a damper on the upcoming Passover season. The retailers are mainly concerned that key items like eggs, flour, potatoes, and poultry will be at record levels, surpassing last year’s shocking increases. They seem to be less concerned with supply chain issues saying that many of the SKUs may already be in stock. One retailer said: “We keep getting shocked by an endless spade of increases which we are mightily trying not to pass along to consumers.” He was also concerned about the possibility of spot shortages of many goods and wondered how high the price of Shmurah Matzah might be this holiday.
And now could we have Toras Hashem Temimah?!
ReplyDeletehttps://mishpacha.com/conflict-resolution/
ReplyDeleteYosef Shapotshnick. I've no way to describe him except a religious anarchist. He presented as a chassidish rabbi, yet during his 24 years in London — he died in 1937 — not a month went by that he wasn’t involved in some major controversy & scandal.
His actions were so damaging that R' Yechezkel Abramasky refused to allow his burial in the Jewish cemetery. The Chofetz Chaim writes that one may record for “generations upon generations” the wickedness of who flaunts rulings of beis din (Hilchos LH 4:8) — Shapotshnick qualified with flying colors.
After WWI, there were a large number of agunos. Shapotshnick became very concerned about this problem. He started writing & actively seeking solutions, many against halachah.
A social activist troublemaker who felt normative halacha didn't take into consideration the churban of the agunos, he claimed there were 40,000 agunos. He sought his own solutions, such as undermining legitimacy of the marriage. Whatever the situation, he had a solution. There was a young widow in London without children, whose deceased husband had a brother in Odessa. She couldn’t go to Odessa for chalitzah, so he undermined the marriage, declaring the brother a mumar.
One case was between him & the London Beis Din, the Court of the Chief Rabbi, but matters changed when Shapotshnick undermined the monopoly the Beis Din had on kosher meat & gave his own hechsher. It was found that 8 of 11 butcher shops under him sold “kosher” meat from non-Jews. Yet Shapotshnick, himself an immigrant, was highly popular in the East End of London where all the immigrants lived. R' Shmuel Yitzchak Hillman, rosh beis din, was very concerned.
So Rav Hillman wrote the gedolim in Europe about how Shapotshnick is matir agunos without basis. The gedolim agreed his heterim were not to be relied on.
Instead of pulling back, Shapotshnick attacked the gedolei Europa — R' Chaim Ozer, the Chofetz Chaim & others, in newspapers he published. Rav Hillman sent these newspapers across Europe to rabbanim who Shapotshnick claimed cosigned his halachic decisions. They disavowed their signatures. Shapotshnick then escalated by claiming all manner of terrible things against anyone disagreeing with him.
In 1928 a kol koreh was issued against him by Agudas HaRabbanim of Poland, signed by 600 rabbis all over Europe. He didn’t disappear though. He continued to publish more seforim, but eventually got involved in a meat scandal in the middle of which he suddenly died.
Shapotshnick had also embarked on an ambitious project for ordinary people to learn Gemara. In 1919 he published a very large, easy-to-read volume. Rashi script was replaced with regular script, and references & perushim, including Rambam on Mishnayos. The layout was clean, clear & easier to read. He was going to publish all Shas, but only mass-published Berachos.
Shapotshnick is a cautionary tale. He was wildly popular among a segment of society because he spoke their language & seemed to care for them. But this made him all the more dangerous. His popularity, coupled with lack of yiras Shamayim, made him a real force of damage. We see this replaying today. There are charismatic, even caring leaders whose lack of yiras Shamayim makes them truly dangerous.
ReplyDeleteBlogger anonymous said...
And now could we have Toras Hashem Temimah?!
******************
https://theunorthodoxjew.blogspot.com/2013/09/chag-sameach.html
"The Chofetz Chaim writes that one may record for “generations upon generations” the wickedness of who flaunts rulings of beis din"
ReplyDeleteMargo and Belsky, come on down! You're the next contestants on the Baksheesh is right!
See what happens when you take Hashem out of Toras Hashem Temimah. :-(
ReplyDeleteLast I looked He was there and everywhere :-)
ReplyDelete"there and everywhere"
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4tqMEFFcsi8
So UOJ is co-opting the Chabadsker niggun?
LOL
You can take the boy out of Crown Heights, but not Crown Heights out of the boy :-)))
ReplyDelete