Melbourne researchers trial use of common blood-thinning drug heparin to combat 
COVID-19

By ABC state political reporter Bridget Rollason  Updated 6h ago  
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-12-22/melbourne-researchers-trial-use-of-common-drug-to-combat-covid/100717224


Melbourne researchers have turned one of the world's most-used drugs into a 
nasal spray which they hope could prevent COVID-19 transmission.

Key points:


  *   The nasal spray is expected to be effective against emerging COVID 
variants, including Omicron



  *   The drug will be trialled in 340 Victorian households over the next six 
months



  *   The spray does not require refrigeration and could be distributed widely



  *   Northern Health medical divisional director Don Campbell said he had a 
"crazy idea" that the blood-thinning drug heparin could stop the virus growing 
in cells.


But it wasn't until his wife asked "well, what are you going to do about it?" 
that he got to work.

Nearly two years later, with the help of researchers at Melbourne, Monash and 
Oxford Universities, his team has been able to replicate international findings 
that heparin can block the transmission of COVID-19 and prevent infection.

The spray coats the nose but does not go down into the lungs. The researchers 
say it is cheap, easy to distribute and is expected to be effective against 
mutant strains of the virus including the Omicron variant.

"It won't matter if a new variant comes along, this drug will block that 
protein from infecting the cells," Professor Campbell said.

"I'm very confident that we can demonstrate that it will work, and people will 
be using this before they go to the shops and before they go to school."

Household contacts to be part of trial

The treatment has received $4.2 million from the Victorian government to 
undergo clinical trials.

Over the next six months, 340 Victorian households will be given the heparin 
nasal spray or a placebo, within hours of their household contact testing 
positive, to reduce transmission.

"The treatment will be given to household family contacts of the persons who 
get COVID, and we will also give it to the person who is infected," Professor 
Campbell said.

"We want to get to them within 24 hours of the diagnosis being known and we are 
confident we can do that."

Heparin is the second most-widely used drug on earth and is stable at room 
temperature for more than three months, meaning it can be widely distributed.

Director of the Lung Health Research Centre at the University of Melbourne, 
Gary Anderson, said the spray would be easy to use — two puffs each nostril, 
three times a day.

Professor Anderson is excited about the science behind the treatment, 
describing it as "cool".

"When [COVID] first gets into the nose it binds to a molecule called heparan 
and if it mutates that binding site it can't bind," he said.

"Heparin is so close in structure to heparan that it binds on and paralyses the 
virus, so it stops it infecting and also stops it spreading to others."

Spray seen as complementary to vaccination

Director of the Medicines Manufacturing Innovation Centre at Monash University, 
Michelle McIntosh, has spent the past 20 months working on the best possible 
formulation for the nasal spray.

She said some coronavirus vaccines had limited distribution in some countries 
because they needed to be stored at ultra-low temperatures.

"One of the wonderful things about heparin is it is already available on the 
market as an approved product for another purpose, it doesn't require 
refrigeration and can be stored in plastic vials so it can be distributed very 
widely and effectively," Professor McIntosh said.

"We are not proposing this as an alternative to a vaccination, it is a 
supplement for people who can't be vaccinated, but we do imagine it will be 
very widely used."

The trial will run over six months in Victoria. The nasal spray treatment is 
one of seven local coronavirus treatment research projects that will share in 
$13 million of funding from the Victorian government.

Victorian Medical Research Minister Jaala Pulford said it's hoped the heparin 
nasal spray can be manufactured locally.

"Coronavirus is not going away any time soon and our amazing researchers are 
doing work that stands to make a real difference," Ms Pulford said.

"These projects will benefit not just Victorians but people around the world."

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