Eli Lilly study hints antibody drug may cut COVID-19 hospitalizations

The Indianapolis headquarters of Eli Lilly and Company. Billionaire investor and Home Depot founder Ken Langone thinks Eli Lilly will be the first trillion-dollar drug company in history. (Photo Provided/Eli Lilly and Co.)

(AP) — An Indianapolis-based drug company says that partial results from a study testing an antibody drug give hints that it may help keep mild to moderately ill COVID-19 patients from needing to be hospitalized, a goal no current coronavirus medicine has been able to meet.

Eli Lilly & Co. announced the results Wednesday in a press release, but they have not been published or reviewed by independent scientists.

The drug missed
the study’s main goal of reducing the amount of virus patients had after
11 days, except at the middle of three doses being tested. However,
most study participants, even those given a placebo treatment, had
cleared the virus by then, so that time point now seems too late to
judge that potential benefit, the company said.

Other tests suggest the drug was reducing virus sooner, and the results are an encouraging “proof of principle” as this and other studies continue, Lilly said.

The company said it would talk with regulators about
possible next steps but that it was too soon to speculate on whether
these interim results might lead to any action to allow early use.

“I’m
strongly encouraged” by the results, said Dr. Myron Cohen, a University
of North Carolina virologist. He had no role in the Lilly study but
helps direct antibody studies for a public-private research group the
federal government formed to speed testing of these drugs.

“This seems to demonstrate what we thought” — that such drugs would give a benefit, he said.

Antibodies
are proteins the body makes when an infection occurs; they attach to a
virus and help it be eliminated. The blood of survivors is being tested
as a treatment for COVID-19 patients because it contains such
antibodies, but the strength and types of antibodies varies depending on
each donor, and doing this on a large scale is impractical.

The
drugs that Lilly and other companies are testing are concentrated
versions of specific antibodies that worked best against the coronavirus
in lab and animal tests, and can be made in large, standardized doses.

They
are being tested to treat newly diagnosed COVID-19 patients in hope of
preventing serious disease or death, and to try to prevent infection in
people at high risk of that such as nursing home residents and health
workers.

Wednesday’s results come from 450 people in a mid-stage
study testing an antibody jointly developed by Indianapolis-based Lilly
and the Canadian company AbCellera in people with COVID-19 symptoms not
severe enough to warrant hospitalization. The drug is given once through
an IV and was tested at three doses. Neither the patients nor their
doctors knew which patients received the drug or placebo infusions.

Hospitalization
or ER visits occurred in 1.7%, or 5 of 302 patients given the drug and
6% or 9 of 150 of those given placebo. The company did not disclose
whether those results met scientific tests to rule out that they could
have occurred by chance alone.

The company felt that giving the
actual numbers “told the story in the most balanced way,” said Lilly’s
chief scientific officer, Dr. Daniel Skovronsky.

The difference
seems large enough to suggest a true benefit and the result is
“promising” even though the study missed its main goal, said Dr. Peter
Bach, a health policy expert at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
in New York with no role in the study.

The study will continue to
test the antibody drug in combination with another from a Chinese
company, Junshi Biosciences. Three late-stage studies of it also are
underway, including two sponsored by the U.S. National Institutes of
Health.

Lilly has already started manufacturing its antibody drug,
hoping to have hundreds of thousands of doses ready by fall if studies
give positive results.

Another company that developed an antibody drug cocktail against Ebola — Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. — now is testing a two-antibody drug for coronavirus.