Mexico authorizes remdesivir to treat COVID


Mexico on Friday approved the anti-viral drug remdesivir for emergency use treating COVID-19 patients in the Latin American country, one of the worst hit by the pandemic.

In this file photo taken on April 08, 2020, one vial of the drug Remdesivir lies during a press conference about the start of a study with the Ebola drug Remdesivir in particularly severely ill patients at the University Hospital Eppendorf (UKE) in Hamburg, northern Germany, amidst the new coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic.
(Photo by Ulrich Perrey / POOL / AFP / MANILA BULLETIN)

Regulatory agency Cofepris said it had authorized the medicine for use exclusively by hospitals and specialist doctors during the early stages of the illness.

Mexico joins other countries including the United States, Canada and Japan, as well as the European Commission, that have approved the treatment for use against the coronavirus.

Remdesivir, made by US pharma giant Gilead, was one of the first drugs to show relative promise in shortening the time to recovery in some COVID-19 patients.

But its efficacy in reducing the mortality rate is unproven.

A World Health Organization-backed study said in October that the drug had "little or no effect" on COVID mortality.

Mexico, a country of 126 million people, has recorded more than 193,000 known COVID-19 deaths -- the world's third-highest toll.