US pulls GSK's COVID drug (sotrovimab) as omicron sibling dominates cases
Source: Associated Press
US pulls GSKs COVID drug as omicron sibling dominates cases
By MATTHEW PERRONE
April 5, 2022
WASHINGTON (AP) GlaxoSmithKlines IV drug for COVID-19 should no longer be used because it is likely ineffective against the omicron subvariant that now accounts for most U.S. cases, federal health regulators said Tuesday.
The Food and Drug Administration announced that the companys antibody drug sotrovimab is no longer authorized to treat patients in any U.S. state or territory. The decision was expected, because the FDA had repeatedly restricted the drugs use in the Northeast and other regions as the BA.2 version of omicron became dominant.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Tuesday that BA.2 accounts for 72% of the COVID-19 cases sequenced by health authorities. Some experts have warned of a BA.2-driven surge similar to those that have hit European countries, though U.S. case counts have yet to rise.
The drug from Glaxo and codeveloper Vir Biotechnology is the latest antibody medication to be sideline by the mutating coronavirus, which previously rendered drugs from Eli Lilly and Regeneron obsolete. The FDA pulled their authorization in January after concluding they were ineffective against the original version of omicron.
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Read more: https://apnews.com/article/covid-science-health-glaxosmithkline-medication-d3d3c46bae3b5a433bbd49f09cf0bbcf