Congo DR commences first-ever multi-drug Ebola trial
The Ministry of Health of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has announced that a randomized control
trial has begun to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of drugs used in the
treatment of Ebola patients.
The trial is the first-ever multi
drug trial for an Ebola treatment. It will form part of a multi-outbreak,
multi-country study that was agreed to by partners under a World Health
Organization (WHO) initiative.
“While our focus remains on
bringing this outbreak to an end, the launch of the randomized control trial in
DRC is an important step towards finally finding an Ebola treatment that will
save lives,” said WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “Until
now, patients have been treated under a compassionate use protocol with drugs
that showed promise and had a good safety profile in laboratory conditions. The
giant step DRC is taking now will bring clarity about what works best, and save
many lives in years to come. We hope to one day say that the death and
suffering from Ebola is behind us.”
Until now, over 160 patients have
been treated with investigational therapeutics under an ethical framework
developed by WHO, in consultation with experts in the field and the DRC, called
the Monitored Emergency Use of Unregistered and Investigational Interventions
(MEURI). The MEURI protocol was not designed to evaluate the drugs. Now that
protocols for trials are in place, patients will be offered treatments under
that framework in the facilities where the trial has started. In others,
compassionate use will continue up to the time when they join the
randomization. Patients will not be treated noticeably differently from before,
though the treatment they receive will be decided by random allocation. The
data gathered will become standardized and will be useful for drawing
conclusions about the safety and efficacy of the drugs.
“Our country is struck with Ebola
outbreaks too often, which also means we have unique expertise in combating
it,” said Dr Olly Ilunga, Minister of Health of the DRC. “These trials will contribute to building
that knowledge, while we continue to respond on every front to bring the
current outbreak to an end.”
In October, WHO convened a
meeting of international organizations, United Nations partners, countries at
risk of Ebola, drug manufacturers and others to agree on a framework to
continue trials in the next Ebola outbreak, whenever and wherever that is. Over
time, this will lead to an accumulation of evidence that will help to draw
robust conclusions across outbreaks about the currently available drugs, and
any new ones that may come along.
At the heart of the long term
plan and the current trial is always the goal to ensure that patients with
Ebola and their communities are treated with respect and fairness. All patients
should be provided with the highest level of care and have access to the most
promising medications.
The current trial is coordinated
by WHO, and led and sponsored by the DRC’s National Institute for Biomedical
Research (INRB), in partnership with the DRC Ministry of Health, the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) which is part of the
United States’ National Institutes of Health, The Alliance for International
Medical Action (ALIMA) and other organizations.
The deliberations of the
consultation are available here:
https://www.who.int/ebola/drc-2018/summary-deliberations-ebola-therapeutics.pdf?ua=1
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