News

U.S. grants drug company $12 million to develop Ebola drug


 

References

The federal government has taken its first step toward supporting an experimental drug for treating Ebola.

The U.S. Department of Health & Human Services’ Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response committed to funding BioCryst Pharmaceuticals’ development and manufacturing of such a drug, according to a written statement issued by the agency March 31.

© NIAID/Creative Commons License

The Office awarded approximately $12 million to the North Carolina–based drug company, but the size of the grant could grow to $35 million.

The drug, BCX4430, is a small-molecule drug that prevents the Ebola virus from reproducing in the body. BioCryst is currently using money from the National Institutes of Health to conduct phase I safety studies of the drug in healthy volunteers.

The drug’s effectiveness at treating both the Ebola and Marburg viruses in nonhuman primates indicates that “BCX4430 may be useful as a broad spectrum antiviral drug,” according to the statement.

Recommended Reading

M.O.R.E. means less delirium in ICU
MDedge Internal Medicine
No pain benefit found for IV acetaminophen vs. oral in the neuro ICU
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: Postsurgical readmissions present pay-for-performance challenges
MDedge Internal Medicine
Accurate ID of nonsalvageable trauma patients improves trauma center performance metrics
MDedge Internal Medicine
Ventilator driving pressure may predict mortality in ARDS
MDedge Internal Medicine
Experimental vaccine may have worked on Ebola-exposed physician
MDedge Internal Medicine
Increase enoxaparin doses to prevent VTEs in trauma patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
Ebola-positive healthcare worker to be admitted to NIH
MDedge Internal Medicine
U.S. volunteer infected with Ebola in Sierra Leone
MDedge Internal Medicine
Condition of Ebola patient brought to U.S. worsens
MDedge Internal Medicine