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COVID-19 treatment linked to B.C. biotech shows signs of reducing hospitalizations

What happened: COVID-19 treatment developed in part by a Vancouver company is showing signs of reducing hospitalizations Why it matters: Federal government has allocated $175 million to AbCellera to develop therapeutic antibodies A COVID-19 treatment
The federal government has earmarked $175 million for Vancouver-based AbCellera in its fight against
The federal government has earmarked $175 million for Vancouver-based AbCellera in its fight against COVID-19

What happened: COVID-19 treatment developed in part by a Vancouver company is showing signs of reducing hospitalizations

Why it matters: Federal government has allocated $175 million to AbCellera to develop therapeutic antibodies

A COVID-19 treatment that emerged from a partnership between a B.C. biotech company and an American pharmaceutical giant is producing positive results in clinical trials.

Proof-of-concept data released September 15 by Eli Lilly and Co. (NYSE:LLY) reveals reduced hospitalization rates for patients treated with an antibody developed in collaboration with Vancouver-based AbCellera Biologics Inc.

The pharmaceutical company reports the rate of hospitalizations and emergency room visits for those treated with the antibody known as LY-CoV555 was 1.7% compared with 6% for those treated with a placebo.

Lilly said this represents a 72% risk reduction, while the treatment was “well-tolerated, with no drug-related serious adverse events reported” among those taking LY-CoV555.

In May, Ottawa earmarked $175 million for AbCellera to pursue the development, manufacturing and distribution of therapeutic antibodies.

This came after AbCellera and Lilly announced in April a partnership to develop a new drug for the treatment and prevention of the COVID-19 virus, with Lilly tapping the Vancouver biotech’s platform to zero in on antibodies generated in a natural immune response to the novel coronavirus.

LY-CoV555 wouldn’t be administered to the general population, but to those already infected and require treatment.

The LY-CoV555 antibody treatment was developed over three months with co-operation from Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases after the organizations identified it from a blood sample taken from one of the first U.S. patients to recover from the coronavirus. 

Lilly described LY-CoV555 as the first potential new medicine specifically designed to combat the virus that causes COVID-19.

The first patients were dosed at medical centres in the U.S., including the NYU Grossman School of Medicine and L.A.’s Cedars-Sinai.

Lilly said it intends to publish the early results in a peer-reviewed journal and discuss appropriate next steps with global regulators.

torton@biv.com

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