London: AstraZeneca, the drugmaker that developed one of the first COVID-19 vaccines, has asked the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to authorise the emergency use of a first-of-a-kind antibody treatment to prevent the disease.
The Anglo-Swedish company on Tuesday said that the treatment, known as AZD7442, would be the first long-acting antibody combination to receive an emergency authorisation for Covid-19 prevention. If authorised, the drug would likely be limited to people with compromised immune systems who don't get sufficient protection from vaccination.
The FDA has authorised three other antibody drugs already, including two that can be given after a possible Covid-19 exposure to head off symptoms. AstraZeneca's drug would instead be given as a preventive measure in people who have increased vulnerability to the virus.
The FDA has stressed that antibody drugs are not a substitute for vaccination, which is the most effective, long-lasting form of virus protection. Antibody drugs also are expensive to produce and require an IV or injection and health care workers to administer.
Late-stage human trials showed that AstraZeneca’s antibody drug reduced the risk of developing symptomatic COVID-19 by 77%. More than three-quarters of the participants had suppressed immune systems and other conditions that made them more susceptible to severe disease.