PNB Vesper completes Phase 2 of clinical trials of GPP-Baladol on COVID-19 patients
Clinical trial report to be submitted to Drug Controller General of India on February 22, 2021
PNB Vesper, a Kerala-based life sciences company, announced that it has successfully completed the phase 2 clinical trials of its proprietary drug PNB-001 (GPP-Baladol) on COVID-19 patients. The company had received approval from the Drug Controller General of India (DCGI) to conduct the Phase 2 Clinical trial of GPP-BALADOL in COVID-19 moderate patients with oxygen support in September 2020. The clinical trial was initiated in November 2020 at BJ Government Medical College and Sassoon General Hospital Pune, and Victoria Medical College and Research Institute, Bangalore. The clinical trial report will now be submitted to DCGI on February 22, 2021.
The trial was conducted on 40 patients. The clinical trial protocol was designed in-line with the Solidarity Trial conducted by WHO and other international clinical trials. The primary objective of the clinical trial was to evaluate the overall efficacy of the drug in terms of outcomes such as changes from the baseline in the ordinal scale and mortality by day 28. The secondary objective was to evaluate the safety of GPP-Baladol in patients with moderate COVID-19 infection in terms of outcomes such as improvement in inflammatory segments in X-ray, duration of hospital stay, duration of assisted ventilation, improvement in oxygen saturation, number of days for a negative PCR result and change in inflammatory markers from baseline.
The safety of GPP-Baladol was assessed by the adverse effects shown by the patients and based on functional blood chemistry analysis for liver and kidney and other vital parameters. In order to assess this effectiveness, the patients were divided into two groups and both groups were provided with the standard of care described in the Clinical Management Protocol of the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (MoHFW), in-line with the WHO protocol. The other group, in addition to the standard of care, was given GPP-Baladol thrice a day at a dose of 100 milligrams.
The results of the clinical trial were very promising. PN Balaram, CEO, PNB Vesper Life Sciences said, “Considering the novel mechanism of action of the drug and the clinical trial outcome, GPP-Baladol can be a possible option to save the hospitalised patients all over the world. So far, most of the patients treated with GPP-Baladol showed significant clinical improvement even in the early days of their treatment. Also, none of the patients treated with GPP-Baladol reported any post-treatment health risks. There are about 28 post-covid long-term complications identified by WHO and our treated group do not pose any such long-term health risks and are feeling healthy compared to the standard arm. We are approaching the Government of India for an Emergency Use Authorisation of our drug to treat the hospitalised patients in the country in a clinical trial mode. After knowing the efficacy of the drug in COVID-19 treatment, we are hoping to get immediate approval from the government to make the drug readily available for use in the treatment of the hospitalised patients. Discussions are also started with the US and UK governments on the same front.”
This effective drug molecule developed by the PNB Vesper team for the treatment of COVID-19 has already been patented and the related Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) have been secured by PNB Vesper in the US, Europe and rest of the world.