Fresh
hope appears in the horizon for Ebola patients as Japan on Monday
expressed its readiness to provide its anti-influenza drug as treatment
for the deadly virus.
Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary,
Yoshihide Suga, made the offer hours after a group of scientist in the
United Kingdom said it had discovered that the largest outbreak of the
Ebola Virus Disease was caused by an infected fruit bat that bit a
toddler.
Briefing journalists in Tokyo on
Monday, Suga said Japan was ready to offer the drug, Favipiravir,
which was developed by Toyama Chemical, a subsidiary of Fujifilm, any
time the World Health Organisation requested it.
Approved by the Japanese health ministry
in March, Favipiravir is a tablet developed for the treatment of novel
and re-emerging influenza viruses.
Suga, according to the Agence France Presse, said Japan was waiting for WHO’s decision on further details over the use of untested drugs.
He however said that “in case of an emergency, Japan may respond to individual requests before any further decision by the WHO.”
The spokesperson for the company, Takao
Aoki, said Fujifilm had initiated talks with the United States on how
the drug could be adopted in treating EVD.
He said, “Fujifilm is in talks with the
US Food and Drug Administration on clinical testing of the drug in
treating Ebola, The company has Favipiravir stock for more than 20,000
patients. Ebola and influenza viruses are the same type and
theoretically similar effects can be expected on Ebola,” he said.
It was however not known as of Thursday
last week if Favipiravir is the drug the Federal Ministry of Health had
said it had requested from a foreign country.
The ministry which turned down a trial
drug, Nano Silver, had applied for ZMapp which was administered on two
US aid workers who contracted the virus in Liberia.
The two were discharged last Thursday, a
few days after Washington said it did not have enough XMapp to send to
countries in need of it.
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