Ebola virus is no longer incurable!
Congo trial reports over 90% success.
KINSHASA, Democratic Republic of Congo - August 14, 2019 - A randomized clinical trial taking place in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has been terminated early due to the extraordinary success of two drugs being investigated to treat the Ebola virus. Four new treatments were being tested in the trial, but two have displayed incredible survival rates, especially if given at the earliest stages of infection.
The ongoing Ebola epidemic in Central Africa is the second worst outbreak of the virus in human history. First appearing in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2018, the virus has proved difficult to contain due to continuing military conflicts in the region.
Experimental vaccines have been distributed in the affected regions. However, these preventative measures are of limited value in areas where the virus has already spread. In late 2018, a new clinical trial began spanning four towns stricken by the virus. The study compared the efficacy of four different experimental treatments, but two drugs in particular have quickly shown incredible curative results.
So far, over 75% of those infected with the virus have died in this ongoing outbreak. The two most successful experimental drugs tested in the new trial reported significant reductions in mortality rates. The most effective agent, called REGN-EB3, showed mortality rates of only 29% in those treated. Even more impressively, 94% of those patients treated with REGN-EB3 in the earliest stage of viral infection survived.
Due to the unique nature of running a trial such as this in the middle of an ongoing outbreak, there had been an early stopping criterion built into the study in the case of a certain treatment revealing significantly positive efficacy. An independent monitoring board reviewing data from the trial recently met and decided REGN-EB3 had crossed this threshold of success resulting in the general trial being terminated.
An extension phase of the trial is now being considered utilizing REGN-EB3, and the other successful drug, mAb114. Future patients will now be randomized between these two drugs at the primary Ebola treatment centers, with the final results of the clinical trial to be evaluated and published later this year.
"From now on, we will no longer say that Ebola is incurable," says Jean-Jacques Muyembe-Tamfum, director of the Institut National de Recherche Biomédicale, the organization overseeing the trial. "People think that if you enter a treatment center, you'll leave in a coffin. We have a great message: a treatment center is a place where you can recover and (from which) you leave alive."