On Thursday, health minister Greg Hunt announced Australia’s drug regulator had provisionally approved two new medicines for the treatment of COVID. These are Lagevrio, made by American pharmaceutical company Merck Sharpe & Dohme, and Paxlovid, by Pfizer.
With the number of hospitalizations and deaths due to the virus continuing to rise, the approval of these drugs comes at a good time.
The federal government has purchased a combined 800,000 courses of the pills, and said the drugs will initially be prioritized for the elderly and other high-risk groups. Both companies say their drugs will work against the Omicron variant, though this is based on preliminary lab-based research.
This is how they work
Merck’s Lagevrio (generic name: molnupiravir) is an antiviral drug that causes errors to be copied into the COVID virus whenever it replicates. This makes the virus less effective in causing disease.
Pfizer’s Paxlovid is a two tablet combination of a new drug called nirmatrelvir, and a drug already used to treat HIV called ritonavir. Nirmatrelvir stops the function of a key protein the virus needs to replicate itself, while ritonavir is there to stop the body from breaking down nirmatrelvir.
According to clinical trial data, Lagevrio and Paxlovid are useful in reducing viral load, the severity of COVID symptoms, and thus, the number of people hospitalized and/or dying from the virus. Many of Omicron’s concerning mutations are on the “spike protein”, which is what the coronavirus uses to enter our cells. So one reason these drugs are still expected to be effective against variants like Omicron is they don’t target the spike protein.
Are these medications effective against Omicron?
This week Pfizer published a media release detailing preliminary results suggesting Paxlovid is still effective against the Omicron variant.
The results of two laboratory studies by Pfizer researchers and released as pre-prints (yet to be reviewed by other scientists) show that the nirmatrelvir can interrupt viral replication across all COVID variants of concern.
One independent lab-based study released online as a pre-print looked at both Pfizer and Merck’s drugs.
It found the key drug in Pfizer’s Paxlovid, nirmatrelvir, is still active against its protein target in Omicron, and can still reduce overall viral load. The study also found Merck’s Lagevrio showed activity against Omicron. The president of Merck Research Laboratories said the company is very confident Lagevrio will be effective against Omicron. It’s important to note this research was undertaken in a lab, so we’re still yet to see data on how effective it is in people with Omicron under real-world conditions. With both drugs approved in the United States and the United Kingdom earlier than in Australia, it’s likely we’ll see in-person outcomes data on the effectiveness and safety of these drugs in the near future.
In clinical trials, before Omicron emerged, Paxlovid reduced the risk of hospitalization and death by 88% in high-risk patients, and Lagevrio by 31%.
What are the side effects?
It’s important to note no medicine is perfectly safe and side-effect-free. From clinical trials so far, we know fewer than 7% of patients taking Lagevrio experienced a serious side effect. Commonly reported were diarrhea, nausea, and dizziness.
Different side effects were observed with Paxlovid, such as vomiting, diarrhea, and headache, and fewer than 2% of patients in the trials experienced serious side effects. The risk of side effects with Paxlovid can be higher if patients are also taking other medicines at the same time. The list of medications that shouldn’t be taken with Paxlovid includes some anti-cancer, anti-inflammatory, and cardiovascular medications, and even some herbal medicines such as St John’s Wort.
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