
The antiviral medicine remdesivir from Gilead Sciences failed to speed the improvement of patients with Covid-19 or prevent them from dying, according to results from a long-awaited clinical trial conducted in China. Gilead, however, said the data suggest a “potential benefit.”
A summary of the study results was inadvertently posted to the website of the World Health Organization and seen by STAT on Thursday, but then removed.
“A draft manuscript was provided by the authors to WHO and inadvertently posted on the website and taken down as soon as the mistake was noticed. The manuscript is now undergoing peer review and we are waiting for a final version before WHO comments on it,” said WHO spokesperson Daniela Bagozzi.
Gilead spokesperson Amy Flood said the company believes “the post included inappropriate characterization of the study.” Because the study was stopped early because it had too few patients, she said, it cannot “enable statistically meaningful conclusions.” However, she said, “trends in the data suggest a potential benefit for remdesivir, particularly among patients treated early in disease.”
The data (for details, see screenshot below) will be closely scrutinized but are also likely imperfect. The study was terminated prematurely, which could have affected the results. The context that would be provided by a full manuscript is missing, and the data have not been reviewed as normally occurs before publication.
Many studies are being run to test remdesivir, and this one will not be the final word. Results are expected soon from a Gilead-run study in severe Covid-19 patients, although that study may be difficult to interpret because the drug is not compared to patients receiving only standard treatment. Encouraging data from patients in that study at the University of Chicago were described by researchers at a virtual town hall and obtained by STAT last week. However, unlike those data, these new results are from a randomized controlled trial, the medical gold standard.
Gilead is also running a study with a control group in more moderate Covid-19 patients, and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is running a study that compares remdesivir to placebo. There are even more studies of the drug ongoing.
According to the summary of the China study, remdesivir was “not associated with a difference in time to clinical improvement” compared to a standard of care control. After one month, it appeared 13.9% of the remdesivir patients had died compared to 12.8% of patients in the control arm. The difference was not statistically significant.
“In this study of hospitalized adult patients with severe COVID-19 that was terminated prematurely, remdesivir was not associated with clinical or virological benefits,” the summary states. The study was terminated prematurely because it was difficult to enroll patients in China, where the number of Covid-19 cases was decreasing.
An outside researcher said that the results mean that any benefit from remdesivir is likely to be small.
“If there is no benefit to remdesivir in a study this size, this suggests that the overall benefit of remdesivir in this population with advanced infection is likely to be small in the larger Gilead trial,” said Andrew Hill, senior visiting research fellow at Liverpool University.
He added that the results of the study should be pooled with larger studies being conducted by Gilead using a technique called meta-analysis to allow for “a balanced view of the efficacy of remdesivir from all randomized trials.”
STAT contacted the lead investigator of the study but did not receive an immediate response.
As originally designed, the China study was meant to enroll 453 patients. The patients were allowed to enter the study up to 12 days from the onset of Covid-19 symptoms. Once enrolled, the patients were randomized in a double-blind fashion and were treated with daily infusions of remdesivir or a placebo for 10 days.
The primary goal is to show that the drug is better than placebo at improving symptoms within 28 days. That improvement is measured with a six-point scoring system ranging from hospital discharge (a score of 1) to death (a score of 6). In order to count as someone who responded to the drug, a patient must improve by at least two points. Patients can remain hospitalized at the end of the 28-day period of the clinical trial but still improve enough clinically — no longer needing intubation or supplemental oxygen, for example — to count as a responder.
According to the abstract, 158 patients received remdesivir and 79 patients were in the control arm; one patient in the control arm withdrew before receiving treatment. The abstract said that for time to clinical improvement, the hazard ratio was 1.23, which would normally mean the patients on remdesivir improved more slowly than those in the control group.
However, in a previous note to investors preparing them for the data, Umer Raffat, a biotech analyst at Evercore ISI, had said to expect the opposite arrangement: that a hazard ratio of 1.2 would show patients were doing better. It is not certain how the hazard ratio is being described in the abstract.
Whether or not the drug benefit is trending in a positive or negative direction, the difference described in the abstract is not statistically significant, meaning that the study failed.
There are differences in the enrollment criteria of Covid-19 patients and the way remdesivir is being used that make extrapolating results from this China study to the ongoing studies difficult.
Flood, the Gilead spokesperson, said the company regrets that “the WHO prematurely posted information regarding the study, which has since been removed” and emphasized that the researchers running the study “did not provide permission for publication of results.” She said the data are expected to be published in a peer-reviewed journal soon.

I wouldnt trust anything coming from China and from WHO for that matter.
Study was shared by China which was not supposed be and then published on WHO which was not supposed be and then removed and it says it doesnt work??
It might not work but I will wait to hear that from someone who is trustworthy.
Dr. Andre Kalil said the enrollment for the randomized, double-blind NIAID study closed on Sunday and has far exceeded initial goals of 400 to 500 patients. He said to expect results as early as mid-May, so only a few more weeks until we have answers from a real study.
When a company ends a study early, it’s usually an indicator that they don’t wish to back a losing horse. The “still hopeful” rhetoric is little more than smoke. Time to explore new avenues.
Gilded didn’t end the study early. China did because they couldn’t find any more people with coronavirus. Did you even read the report
Alone, the hazard ratio doesn’t tell us much. Is the lower range below 1.00? If so it’s not statistically significant. But the hope remains that this a very small study and that a larger, better controlled study will reveal remdesivir’s true clinical effect, maybe a good one. Hoping so. Gilead’s position is worthless as they’re a bit biased (!), esp given their current market cap based on this drug.
For what it is worth, I wouldn’t trust ANYTHING coming out of China.
Small study report inadvertently leaked by WHO? Yeah right.
I also have a problem with Adam F., who has a reputation for what could be considered as bias and slanted reporting when it comes to biotech companies. Can’t you people at STAT find someone with a real technical background instead of a non-science degree like Adam F?
re E Burkhardt’s comment on Adam Feuerstein: Who is E Burckhardt? What are his credentials? What is his evidence for the claims he makes about Feuerstein (“reputation for … bias”, “slanted reporting”).
We need to wait for reliable results from the U.S trials. And other trusted Countries.
The integrity of both parties mentioned is questionable, and the article is here say. The next thing I’m sure to hear is that there is no contagion in China and the Viruse isn’t communicable between people..
Right now, nothing effects the stock market more than news on remdesivir. For some reason I get the feeling that the Chinese Government loves messing with our economy. It just makes you wonder… Why was the study leaked? Why is there confusion with the meaning of the text of the report? Was it altered?
Interesting that it offers a contradiction to prior results, but due to the unknown trustworthiness of the source, I would wait for future results to draw conclusions.
Right now, nothing effects the stock market more than news on remdesivir. For some reason I get the feeling that the Chinese Government loves messing with our economy. It just makes you wonder… Why was the study leaked? Why is there confusion with the meaning of the text of the report? Was it altered?
Interesting that it offers a contradiction to prior results, but due to the unknown trustworthiness of the source, I would wait for future results to draw conclusions.
WOW. A Gilead rep actually said these words? “trends in the data suggest a potential benefit for remdesivir, particularly among patients treated early in disease.” In other words, even though the study failed, it kind of works in Gilead’s opinion. The rep must be a financial rep and not a science rep.
The study was discontinued by Gilead because they didn’t agree with the parameters set up by China, that is, treating patients who have had COVID for 12 days or more. The drug is touted to be effective if administered during the first week, as indicated in the successful University of Chicago study. For whatever reason the Chinese set up this study ignoring parameters suggested by Gilead.