Rutgers University has launched a clinical trial to test the safety and efficacy of a new drug that could help prevent serious illness and death in early-stage COVID-19 patients. The drug is called EDP1815. It is administered orally, and is said to be anti-inflammatory and very safe. It will be given to newly hospitalized COVID-19 patients at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital. They hope to determine if it can regulate the onslaught of something called “cytokine storms,” which cause the immune system to attack organs, such as the lungs, which lead to the immune system malfunctioning and become deadly – and is the reason for severe cases of respiratory distress and death. To read the full story.
Home / News / Rutgers clinical trial: New drug could help prevent serious illness, death in early-stage COVID-19 patients
Recent Posts
- Estrogen Patch Shortages Are Ongoing—Here’s Where to Find Them and What to Ask Your Doctor.
- Toddlers are getting their hands on e-cigarettes and inhaling at an alarming rate, new Rutgers study shows.
- Rutgers deans: We train advanced practice nurses for N.J. Our laws send them elsewhere.
- Push for raw milk intensifies across the US, despite illness outbreaks and scientists’ warnings.
- Princeton undergraduates build real-world skills through community health micro-internships.
Categories
- Community (2,494)
- Covid (1,001)
- CTO Events (6)
- News (3,166)
- Pilots (21)