May 6, 2022
2 mins read

Health service rolls out arthritis drug Baricitinib to treat Covid

It will be the seventh COVID treatment approved in total for use on the NHS…reports Asian Lite News

The UK’s state-funded National Health Service (NHS) said that from Thursday it is rolling out the use of arthritis drug Baricitinib after it has proven to save lives when given to the most seriously ill COVID patients in hospital.

A trial carried out through the NHS and University of Oxford found that 13 per cent fewer severely ill patients died of COVID-19 when treated with Baricitinib compared to existing treatment options. Typically used to treat arthritis to reduce pain and inflammation, the NHS said Baricitinib can now be given to hospitalised COVID patients in addition to current treatments.

The more effective COVID treatments within the NHS arsenal, the more options doctors have to help patients who become seriously ill with COVID, preventing hospital admissions and saving lives, said NHS Medical Director Professor Steve Powis.

This is the fourth drug that has been fast-tracked for use on the NHS thanks to the world-leading RECOVERY [Randomised Evaluation of COVID-19 Therapy] trial and is just as important because it gives our hard-working clinicians another life-saving treatment option and strengthens our defence against COVID-19, he said.

Arthritis drugs work by reducing inflammation caused by COVID-19 by blocking signals to the immune system that are causing it to attack the body. Patients given Baricitinib will receive a daily dose for 10 days, or until they are discharged from hospital, whichever comes first.

According to the NHS, the drug bolsters the options at doctors disposal when looking to treat hospitalised patients in the most effective way and can be used to supplement other COVID treatments in patients aged two and over. It will be the seventh COVID treatment approved in total for use on the NHS.

The move is described as the latest in an armoury of COVID treatments that the NHS has at its disposal, which now includes three repurposed arthritis drugs with Baricitinib joining Tocilizumab and Sarilumab that have treated an estimated 32,000 of the most severely ill COVID patients in England’s hospital.

The NHS says it has led the rollout of COVID medicines, from the discovery of Dexamethasone as the world’s first effective treatment to the first vaccination outside of a clinical trial in December 2020.

As well as these arthritis drugs, the NHS says it will continue to use other monoclonal antibody and antiviral treatments.

ALSO READ-MENA healthcare projects on track

Previous Story

Gen. McColl slams govt for ‘abandoning’ Afghans

Next Story

MoneyGram International partners with Banque Misr

Latest from -Top News

New York Honours Indian Constitution

The New York State Senate passed a resolution marking 75 years of the Indian Constitution, introduced by Senator Jeremy Cooney, highlighting shared democratic values with the U.S….reports Asian Lite News The New

Demining support transforms Cambodia

Director for South-East Asia and Pacific, Charles Hay is visiting Cambodia to see the positive impact of the UK’s Global Mine Action Programme   FCDO Director for South-East Asia and Pacific, Charles

UK-Angola trade mission strengthens ties

British businesses explore Angola’s crucial sectors, forging partnerships for continued sustainable growth Ambassador Bharat Joshi welcomed UK Trade Envoy Calvin Bailey and a delegation of over 20 UK businesses eager to explore

Senior general appointed new Royal Navy chief in UK

Gen. Sir Gwyn Jenkins also faced allegations that he oversaw the rejection of hundreds of resettlement applications from former Afghan special forces members who served alongside British troops against the Taliban The
Go toTop

Don't Miss

UK govt nod for vaccine targeting Omicron

Moderna’s chief medical officer, Dr Paul Burton, previously said that

Covid-19 daily dashboard amended to include reinfections

The new data shows that reinfection rates averaged around 1.4