City
Epaper

Covid rebound common, even in patients untreated with Paxlovid: Study

By IANS | Published: March 04, 2023 11:54 AM

New York, March 4 "Covid rebound," in which evidence of the illness disappears and then returns days or ...

Open in App

New York, March 4 "Covid rebound," in which evidence of the illness disappears and then returns days or weeks later, is surprisingly common, even among patients who did not take the antiviral Paxlovid, finds a study.

Pfizer's antiviral drug Paxlovid consists of nirmatrelvir and ritonavir tablets, co-packaged for oral use. In clinical trials, Paxlovid has shown to reduce the odds that a person at risk of severe Covid-19 would need to be hospitalised by almost 90 per cent compared with a placebo. It received emergency use approval in late 2021 from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

But reports of Covid-19 rebound started appearing in the medical literature in 2022.

According to the new study led by researchers at the Scripps Research Translational Institute in the US, "rebound after clearance of SARS-CoV-2 test positivity or Covid-19 symptom resolution is more common than previously reported in both treated and untreated patients".

To understand, the team offered a Covid test kit for the study participants to check if they had a verified positive test. Each participant was asked to take a test and fill out a symptom questionnaire every other day for 16 days.

The team then compared the rates of rebound for those who did and didn't opt to take Paxlovid. Rebound was measured in two ways: a positive test result after a negative test, or a reported recurrence of symptoms after symptom resolution. For this preliminary analysis, there were 127 people in the Paxlovid-treated group, and 43 in the non-Paxlovid group.

Either way rebounds were measured, the Paxlovid group experienced them at a higher rate: 14.2 per cent vs. 9.3 per cent for antigen test rebounds, and 18.9 per cent vs. 7.0 per cent for symptom rebounds.

While the findings must be validated with a larger number of participants, the preliminary results, published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, already make clear that the rebound rates for both treated and untreated groups are higher than the rates reported in prior studies.

For example, an analysis of their clinical trial results by Pfizer found rebound rates of only about 2 per cent in both Paxlovid and placebo groups over a two-week period.

"We're hoping to answer key questions about the rebound phenomenon, such as whether it's enhanced by Paxlovid, how much it depends on the viral variant and what is the role of the patient's immune system," said lead author Jay Pandit, Assistant Professor at the Scripps.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Jay panditUs Food And Drug AdministrationPfizerPfizer inc.Pfizer india
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalFormer Pfizer Employee, Indian-American, Found Guilty of Insider Trading on Covid Medicine Trial in the US

InternationalUS FDA okays 1st over-the-counter birth control pill

Other SportsPV Sindhu, Lakshya Sen move to quarter-finals of US Open badminton 

LifestyleStud reveals successful cooperation depends on good mindreading abilities

TechnologySony to globally launch 'Access controller' for PS5 on Dec 6

Health Realted Stories

HealthDrugmaker Sanofi partners OpenAI, Formation Bio on AI-powered drug development

HealthBiocon Biologics gets US FDA nod for biosimilar version of eye treatment drug Eylea

HealthMen with Diabetes Face Higher Risk of Severe Health Complications Than Women, Study Finds

HealthNightmares, hallucinations in daytime may signal onset of lupus: Study

NationalKerala: Five-Year-Old Succumbs to Amoebic Meningoencephalitis in Malappuram District