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Radio France Internationale
Radio France Internationale
National

France orders 50,000 doses of new Covid pill molnupiravir

Capsules of the experimental anti-Covid drug molnupiravir, for which Merck is seeking emergency use authorisation in the US Handout Merck & Co,Inc./AFP/File

France has placed an order for 50,000 doses of the oral drug known as molnupiravir, used to treat Covid-19. The American laboratory Merck says it reduces the risk of hospitalisation by half in patients who take it during their first few days of infection.

The drug, which as a tablet is easier to administer than existing intravenous treatment options, has been hailed as a breakthrough.

"It will be delivered at the end of November, beginning of December," Health Minister Olivier Véran told the Senate on Tuesday.

It comes on the heels of a decision by European health authorities to accelerate their validation of the drug.

"EMA's human medicines committee (CHMP) has started a rolling review of the oral antiviral medicine molnupiravir ... developed by Merck Sharp & Dohme in collaboration with Ridgeback Biotherapeutics for the treatment of Covid-19 in adults," the European Medicines Agency said in a statement.

"Preliminary results "suggest that the medicine may reduce the ability of SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes Covid-19) to multiply in the body, thereby preventing hospitalisation or death in patients with Covid-19," the Amsterdam-based EMA said.

Slowing down the disease

The EMA will now assess whether molnupiravir complies with European standards of efficacy, safety and quality, a process that could take several months.

Until now, Covid therapeutics such as monoclonal antibodies and Gilead's remdesivir – authorised for use in the EU under the name Veklury – have been administered intravenously.

Oral antivirals such as molnupiravir work by decreasing the ability of a virus to replicate, thereby slowing down the disease.

Given to patients within the first few days following a positive test, molnupiravir is taken morning and evening for 5 days. It can also be prescribed for at-risk patients as prevention.

The drug was put forward for inspection by the FDA in the United States on 11 October.

Speeding up generic production

Meanwhile, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation last week announced an investment of up to 120 million dollars in an effort to speed up low-income countries' access to the new drug.

The money would be used to encourage the production of generic forms of the drug by other companies, especially in India, to which Merck has already granted such licences.

In a parallel development, the US-based Atea Pharmaceuticals, with Swiss pharma giant Roche, last week admitted suffering a set back in clinical trials of an orally administered drug.

The drug "did not meet its primary endpoint, showing no significant reduction in viral load", Atea said in a statement.

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