The company said on Tuesday that the treatment, known as AZD7442, would be the first long-acting antibody combination to receive an emergency use authorization for COVID-19 prevention. The treatment may help protect people whose immune systems don't respond adequately to vaccination, AstraZeneca said.
AstraZeneca, the Anglo-Swedish drugmaker that developed one of the first COVID-19 vaccines, has asked the US Food and Drug Administration to authorise the emergency use of an antibody treatment to prevent the disease. The company said on Tuesday that the treatment, known as AZD7442, would be the first long-acting antibody combination to receive an emergency use authorization for COVID-19 prevention. The treatment may help protect people whose immune systems don't respond adequately to vaccination, AstraZeneca said.
“Late-stage human trials showed that AZD7442 reduced the risk of developing symptomatic COVID-19 by 77 percent. More than three-quarters of the participants had suppressed immune systems and other conditions that made them more susceptible to severe disease. Vulnerable populations such as the immunocompromised often aren't able to mount a protective response following vaccination and continue to be at risk of developing COVID-19,” Mene Pangalos, AstraZeneca's executive vice president for pharmaceutical research, said in a statement.
“With this first global regulatory filing, we are one step closer to providing an additional option to help protect against COVID-19 alongside vaccines." US demand for antibody treatments soared over the summer, particularly in states like Florida, Louisiana and Texas, where hospitalisations among unvaccinated patients threatened to overwhelm the health care system.