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A Guide To the Global Battle Against the Coronavirus

Photo credit: KTSDESIGN/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY - Getty Images
Photo credit: KTSDESIGN/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY - Getty Images

From Popular Mechanics

COVID-19 continues to spread rapidly as governments, hospitals, healthcare workers, and communities reel from the resulting death and economic devastation.

Schools are shut down, college campuses are empty, and many people exhibiting symptoms find it incredibly difficult to get tested. This new strain of coronavirus continues overwhelming and exhausting resources and populations, but there is hope—several organizations are working on COVID-19 research which might help in the creation of treatments, and eventually, a vaccine for the disease.

⚠️This post will be updated as more information becomes available.

Pitt Doctors May Have Developed a Vaccine

A promising development has come from the University of Pittsburgh, where researchers at the school's medical center (UPMC) might have developed a vaccine against COVID-19. According to a news release, the team who worked on the vaccine development “were able to act quickly because they had already laid the groundwork during earlier coronavirus epidemics”—including the SARS and MERS outbreaks in 2003 and 2014, respectively.

Andrea Gambotto, MD, one of the paper authors, says that the team she worked with “knew exactly where to fight this new virus” because it's so closely related to SARS and MERS.

The vaccine has been dubbed “PittCoVacc”—short for Pittsburgh coronavirus vaccine—and would be delivered via a “microneedle array” in which a small patch containing 400 tiny needles “delivers the spike protein pieces into the skin, where the immune reaction is the strongest.” The patch would adhere to skin—just like a band aid—and the microneedles, comprised “entirely of sugar and the protein pieces” would dissolve and be absorbed by the skin. Still, the vaccine needs FDA approval in order for the team to begin human clinical trials. The team hopes that the application and approval processes can be expedited so that they can produce a tested vaccine as quickly and responsibly as possible.

Five Minute Test Ready to Go

The fastest available COVID-19 diagnosis test—which can produce results within five minutes— has been dubbed ID NOW and was developed by Abbott, a medical device company. ID NOW will reportedly be ready for use in hospitals and medical offices beginning in the second week of April 2020. Abbott plans to begin delivering “50,000 tests per day” for rapid diagnosis uses. The ID NOW machine is similar in size to a toaster, weighs 6.6 pounds, and uses molecular technology to deliver results.


Protein May “Distract” Virus

Researchers from Sweden's Karolinska Institutet and the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Canada teamed up to study how a protein used to treat patients with lung disease using a genetically modified version of angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2). The modified protein—human recombinant soluble angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (hrsACE2)—appears to decrease the growth and efficacy of COVID-19 to attach itself to our cells with results depending on dosage administered and “the total amount of virus” present. Still, the results are not decisively conclusive—the research and experimentation has only been conducted on cell cultures and engineered organ tissue; it remains to be seen if this treatment will be effective in protecting humans from the virus. The study and results were published in Cell.


Peptide May Be Able to Block COVID-19

A peptide developed by chemists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) may have the ability to disengage and block COVID-19 from entering our cells. The scientists synthesized a peptide fragment made of amino acids that blocks “the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein interaction ... precluding virus entry into human cells.” The finding has been published in bioRxiv but has yet to be peer-reviewed.


Antibodies Hidden in Plasma

Those who have been infected and fully recovered from COVID-19 may have antibodies in their plasma that can help patients in critical condition from the virus. The Atlantic called it a “Hail Mary,” but there does seem to be some promise in using convalescent plasma therapy from recovered COVID-19 patients to treat those with severe symptoms.

Gary Kobinger, a virologist and director of the Infectious Disease Research Center at the Université Laval in Quebec, told Wired that plasma transfer may be an effective therapy based on the results of a tiny sample size of five patients in China who were treated with the antibody-filled plasma from recovered COVID-19 patients. Still, we shouldn't count the plasma therapy as a cure all.

“If I had to put money on something that would help the most, it would be that. It's not to say other drugs we’re trying won't work. But I wouldn’t expect miracles, because we would know already if they worked really well,” Kobinger said.

One of the challenges that come to mind includes obtaining donated plasma from those who have already recovered from COVID-19.


FDA Fast Tracks Diagnosis Test

The FDA has approved a COVID-19 test that delivers diagnosis results in 45 minutes. Science Alert reports that the “emergency clearance” designation occurred to “make up for lost time” in reference to the glacial pace at which the U.S. has responded to and tried to mitigate the COVID-19 outbreak.

The tests are produced by Cepheid, a California-based biotech company, and won't need to go through a lab for processing but will have limited use. According to Cepheid's Chief Medical Officer, David Persing, “the test should primarily be used in emergency rooms and hospitals, not in doctors’ offices.”


WHO Launches Global Clinical Trials

On March 20, the World Health Organization (WHO) announced the launch of a multi-country clinical study called ‘Solidarity.’ This trial will test the effectiveness of four different drugs—remdesivir, chloroquine, a combination of lopinavir and ritonavir, and that combination of lopinavir and ritonavir in conjunction with interferon beta (which helps reduce inflammation)—against COVID-19. According to the announcement, the WHO will “compare [drug] effectiveness to what is called standard of care—the regular support hospitals treating COVID-19 patients use now.”

So far, several countries—Thailand, Argentina, Bahrain, Canada, France, Iran, Norway, South Africa, Spain, and Switzerland—are on board with the Solidarity trial. The U.S. is absent from that list.


AI Takes a Crack at COVID-19

Two of the biggest threats COVID-19 poses include how rapidly and how easily the virus is transmitted. Mitigation efforts so far include social distancing and self-quarantining, but AI has also shown that it could play a role in virus mitigation and treatment creation.

Summit, the world's fastest super computer, used AI to find out which drugs might prevent COVID-19 from spreading to new hosts. The results? Summit discovered that 77 compounds—out of 8,000 that it ran simulations on— might be able to “limit viral recognition of host cells and/or disrupt host-virus interactions,” according to a paper published in ChemRxiv. While this is new information is helpful, it doesn't mean that an effective COVID-19 treatment is right around the corner.

“Our results don't mean that we have found a cure or treatment for the coronavirus,” Jeremy Smith, one of the paper authors and director of the University of Tennessee's Oak Ridge National Laboratory Center for Molecular Biophysics, said.

“We are very hopeful ... that our computational findings will both inform future studies and provide a framework that experimentalists will use to further investigate these compounds. Only then will we know whether any of them exhibit the characteristics needed to mitigate this virus,” Smith adds.


UNMC Tackles COVID-19 Diagnosis & Testing

Among the scores of healthcare professionals toiling away to save patients infected with COVID-19 is Jana Broadhurst, director of the Nebraska Biocontainment Unit Clinical Laboratory. Broadhurst told Esquire that her lab is “the beating heart of a novel infectious disease response.” The U.S. only has one federal quarantine center and it sits on the University of Nebraska's Medical Center (UNMC) campus in Omaha. Here, Broadhurst, with the support of her lab team, has spent 20-hour days working on a faster diagnosis kit than the testing procedures set up by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

And the grueling effort is working. Broadhurst and her team were among the first stateside clinicians to create their own effective diagnosis test. While this UNMC test isn't as fast as Cepheid's, same day results (Broadhurst says it takes four to six hours) are still possible.


A Flu Drug May Treat COVID-19

Favipiravir, an antiviral drug typically used to treat flu patients, may be effective in also treating those who have contracted COVID-19. A member of China's science and technology ministry shared that the drug was used to treat patients in clinical trials in Wuhan, the virus epicenter, and Shenzhen in Guangdong Province.

The patients out of Shenzhen who had tested positive for COVID-19 were retested—on average within a four-day period—after receiving favipiravir. The results came back negative. The Guardian reports that x-rays showed improved lung conditions in 91 percent of those who received favipiravir doses compared the 62 percent who did not receive the drug. Japanese doctors are also using favipiravir on patients who have been diagnosed with COVID-19 and exhibit “mild to moderate symptoms.”

However, it seems that favipiravir—also known as Avigan—is less effective in patients with “more severe symptoms,” per a Japanese health ministry source.


Scientists Pool Their Data

Wired reports that staff from the University of North Carolina (UNC) Chapel Hill and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City have teamed up to pool data for patients who have chronic illnesses—with a focus on people with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and have contracted COVID-19. These registries include what medications each person takes for their chronic illness and what they've been prescribed for COVID-19 in addition to how the patient responds to treatment.

The registry has been named Secure-IBD (Surveillance Epidemiology of Coronavirus Under Research Exclusion) and went from an idea to launch within a week per Michael Kappelman, a pediatric gastroenterologist at UNC and one of the founders of the registry.

This effort has been a call to action for doctors in other disciplines who have begun working on creating their own international registries including the COVID-19 Global Rheumatology Alliance. This research could help doctors better understand COVID-19, its interactions within different populations who have preexisting conditions. and its interactions with prescription drugs.


Additional Treatments in Progress

Stat News reports that several drug companies are working to create treatments and vaccines for COVID-19. They note that Gilead Sciences, Ascletis Pharma, Moderna Therapeutics, and CanSino Biologics are among the groups working on novel medicines to combat COVID-19.

Some of these companies are trying to develop vaccines while others are focusing on virus treatments. So far, no vaccine exists for COVID-19—for a couple of reasons, the main one being that vaccine development can take years. Typically, introducing a vaccine to the public involves three lengthy approval process: licensure, recommendations, and requirements. Licensure is where the FDA needs to approve a new vaccine for use. The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) says that licensure can take decades and notes that the varicella vaccine took 11 years to get FDA licensure.

Recommendation is where healthcare providers “seek the recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), which advises the CDC, the Committee of Infectious Diseases of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), and the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP),” according to CHOP. This is where the FDA compares the risks vs. benefits of the vaccine. Finally, a vaccine reaches the requirements stage. This is where it's determined whether or not a vaccine is required by state legislatures, health departments, and local governments.

Additionally, vaccines must undergo trial phases in which humans and animals alike are used to test the efficacy and effects of the new vaccine. According to CHOP, phase III is the “final stage of development before a company requests product licensing, and it takes three to four years to complete.” So, even with expedited trials and phases and approval processes, a COVID-19 vaccine will still take time.

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