SLU’s COVID-19 Treatment Trial Offers Ray of Hope
Carrie Bebermeyer
Public Relations Director
carrie.bebermeyer@slu.edu
314-977-8015
Reserved for members of the media.
04/30/2020
Researchers are heartened that a medication may shorten the length of the illness and save lives.
Researchers at 鶹ý’s Center for Vaccine Development were cheered by early data from a clinical trial showing that patients who were hospitalized with COVID-19 recovered faster when they were given the experimental drug remdesivir, cutting recovery time from 15 to 11 days. The study also showed that patient mortality rates dropped from 11.6% to 8% for those given the study medication.
SLU was one of 68 study sites around the country that enrolled patients in the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) clinical trial. The study enrolled patients who were hospitalized
with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 at SSM Health 鶹ý Hospital.
“This is exciting news,” said Sarah George, M.D., associate professor of infectious
diseases at 鶹ý and the principal investigator of the St. Louis
trial. “We now have data that says this drug reduces the time people are ill with
COVID-19.
“We think this drug may save lives.”
While George and other experts emphasize that more study is needed, the trial’s initial data provides evidence that patients given remdesivir, which was developed by Gilead Sciences, Inc., recovered 31% faster than those given a placebo. This is welcome news as no treatment currently exists for COVID-19.
We still need more research, prevention and a vaccine, but this good news offers a ray of hope during this long and terrible pandemic.
Sarah George, M.D.
At a White House press conference on Wednesday, Anthony Fauci, M.D., director of the
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), called the drug the
new standard-of-care.
George expressed gratitude to the patients who participated in the trial, noting
that the research could not have advanced without their help and that of the Vaccine
Center staff.
“We still need more research, prevention and a vaccine, but this good news offers
a ray of hope during this long and terrible pandemic,” said George. “I’m very proud
of the work taking place at 鶹ý’s Center for Vaccine Development
and I’m grateful to each patient who agreed to participate in the study.”
The 鶹ý Center for Vaccine Development is one of an elite group
of research facilities that investigates vaccines and treatments for infectious diseases.
One of only nine federally-funded Vaccine and Treatment Evaluation Units (VTEU), SLU
is on the front lines in the fight against pandemics and global health crises.
Renewed as a federally-funded VTEU in December, SLU has been a VTEU member since 1989. As a VTEU, SLU can conduct Phase 1 through 4 vaccine and treatment trials, including clinical studies in collaboration with partners from industry.