Guidelines

IDSA updates COVID guidelines for antibodies, antivirals, other drugs


 

An infectious disease expert panel cautions against routine use of bamlanivimab (Eli Lilly) and notes that remdesivir (Veklury) can shorten the clinical course of COVID-19 – which could be critical “as hospitals fill up” across the United States.

The group also said the monoclonal antibodies approved for emergency use by the Food and Drug Administration and still in development hold promise, although more clinical trial data are needed.

These and other recommendations appear in updated guidelines from the Infectious Diseases Society of America, released Nov. 18 and Nov. 22.

A conditional ‘no’ on routine bamlanivimab

“The guideline panel gave a conditional recommendation against the routine use of bamlanivimab,” Adarsh Bhimraj, MD, cochair of the IDSA COVID-19 Treatment and Management Guidelines Expert Panel, said.

On Nov. 10, the FDA issued an emergency-use authorization ( EUA) for bamlanivimab for use in ambulatory patients with mild to moderate COVID-19.

“We did have a remark that it may be used in patients who have increased risk of severe COVID-19, as it is outlined in the FDA emergency-use authorization issued last week,” he said. He added that use should follow an informed discussion between provider and patient, one in which “the patient puts a very high value on the uncertain benefits and a low value on uncertain adverse events.”

The panel’s rationale was based in part on interim analysis of the phase 2 BLAZE-1 trial , which found 1.6% of people randomly assigned to bamlanivimab had an emergency department visit or hospitalization compared with 6.3% of those receiving a placebo.

“We thought the estimate was too fragile because the number in each arm was very low. Even a small change in these numbers could make the difference nonsignificant,” said Bhimraj, head of the neurologic infectious diseases section in the department of infectious diseases at the Cleveland (Ohio) Clinic.

Awaiting more data on antibody combination

On November 21, the FDA granted an EUA to the casirivimab and imbdevimab monoclonal antibody combination (Regeneron), indicated to treated mild to moderate COVID-19.

“Surprisingly, the preliminary results released in the EUA look a lot like bamlanivimab,” Dr. Bhimraj said.

Unlike bamlanivimab, for which trial details were published, the panel does not yet have the totality of data on casirivimab and imbdevimab, and therefore is not yet making a recommendation. “We want to be cautious as a guideline panel. We are anxiously awaiting the full publication,” he added.

“I do think these monoclonal antibodies show potential for benefit, but as Dr. Bhimraj said, it’s very difficult with the relatively small numbers we’re talking about,” said Rajesh T. Gandhi, MD, cochair of the IDSA COVID-19 Treatment and Management Guidelines Expert Panel.

Remaining questions include the degree of efficacy these antibody therapies will have, as well as which patients are most likely to benefit, added Dr. Gandhi, who is also a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and director of HIV Clinical Services and Education at Massachusetts General Hospital, both in Boston.

Furthermore, although there appear to be adequate supplies of remdesivir and dexamethasone, for example, availability and distribution of monoclonal antibodies could present logistic challenges. Prioritizing which high-risk patients receive this therapy and ensuring equity and access to communities most affected by COVID-19, including minority and low socioeconomic populations, need to be addressed, Dr. Gandhi said.

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