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  • [♩INTRO]

  • More than eighteen hundred people have died so far

  • in the second largest Ebola outbreak in history.

  • But doctors on the front lines now have a new weapon.

  • Two of them, actually, because a clinical trial in

  • the Democratic Republic of the Congo revealed two new treatments

  • which can cure the disease.

  • The Ebola virus kills about three-quarters of people

  • who don't receive medical care.

  • And obviously, that's a lot.

  • But what's really scary how many still die with treatment.

  • The standard treatment is a drug called ZMapp,

  • but it only brings the average mortality rate down to 49%.

  • So in November of 2018, researchers started a clinical trial

  • to test several new drugs.

  • One was an antiviral compound called Remdesivir,

  • which is designed to gum up one of the main proteins the virus needs to replicate.

  • The other two attack the virus with antibodies:

  • proteins made by the immune system which grab onto potential pathogens

  • so they can be destroyed.

  • Antibodies can be very effective treatments

  • if you can get them to stick.

  • The trouble with Ebola is that it can change shape and mask itself from

  • the immune system, so it's been hard to find an antibody that always works.

  • So, one biotech company used special animal models to develop three different antibodies,

  • which they then combined to make REGN-EB3 or just EB3.

  • Other researchers looked for solutions in living people.

  • They managed to clone an antibody from someone

  • who survived an Ebola outbreak in the 90s, and called that mAb114.

  • The trial compared these three new treatments to ZMapp

  • in nearly seven hundred patients over the past nine or so months.

  • And unfortunately, the antiviral didn't do much.

  • The antibodies, thoughthey were amazing.

  • A single dose of the lone antibody brought mortality rates down to 34%,

  • and one dose of the EB3 cocktail dropped them all the way to 29%.

  • But an even bigger win came for patients who were treated with one of these

  • within three days of getting sickbetween 89-94% of them survived!

  • That's so effective that the researchers decided to call off the trial right there

  • so they could give everyone the potential cures.

  • Now, doctors will start a new trial with just EB3 and mAb114 to see how they compare,

  • and both drugs will be made available to people who aren't part of the research.

  • And Ebola isn't the only deadly disease we've gotten closer to curing.

  • Just last week, the US FDA approved a new treatment for antibiotic-resistant tuberculosis

  • a critical step towards getting the drugs to where they're needed most.

  • Tuberculosis, or TB, is a bacterial lung infection.

  • And we've had vaccines and antibiotics for it for years now.

  • But about ten million people around the world still get TB,

  • and one particular strain is resistant to our usual treatment methods,

  • making it extremely deadly.

  • The vast majority of people who contract drug resistant TB

  • die before they're even diagnosed,

  • and even with treatment, only 34% of them make it.

  • Plus, that treatment involves taking upwards of 40 pills a day for up to two years,

  • and can have some serious side effects.

  • Obviously, it'd be great if we had an easier, more effective option.

  • But developing new antibiotics is really expensive,

  • and few companies are willing to make the investment,

  • especially when the majority of people with TB are poor

  • and can't afford expensive drugs.

  • Luckily, nonprofits like the TB Alliance have stepped up.

  • And it's thanks to their influx of cash

  • that the antibiotic which just won over the FDA, called pretomanid, was developed.

  • A clinical trial of the drug which began in 2015 found

  • that, when pretomanid was combined with two other antibiotics,

  • almost 90% of people recovered in six months.

  • And patients only have to take five pills a day!

  • That overwhelming success convinced the FDA to approve of the three-drug regimen.

  • And when the FDA approves of something,

  • international organizations often follow suit.

  • But there are still challenges ahead.

  • Bacterial infections like TB are more common in impoverished areas of the world,

  • so antibiotics need to be priced in a way that poorer patients can afford them.

  • And even non-profits with the best intentions can run out of money.

  • So they need to get manufacturers to agree to price the drug reasonably.

  • Those negotiations are going on right now, so let's all keep our fingers crossed.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow News!

  • But before you go, there's one more thing I'd like to mention.

  • It's not exactly news, but if you're the kind of person

  • who likes to jazz up your jacket or backpack with an awesome pin,

  • you might want to head on over to DFTBA.com/scishow.

  • Our August Pin of the Month, which features the Curiosity rover,

  • is only on sale for another week!

  • And I know you don't want to miss out on such a stylish, adorable tribute.

  • [♩OUTRO]

[♩INTRO]

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