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Why doctors find fighting the coronavirus so challenging

Doctors and other health-care workers fighting the coronavirus outbreak in China don't have any specific treatments to use against this new virus. When they try to treat severe cases, they're walking a tightrope aiming to find just the right level of immune response to kill the virus without setting off other problems.

Advanced team from UN's global public health organization in Beijing today, aiming to learn more about virus

A medical worker in protective suit is seen at an isolation ward of a hospital in Caidian district during the outbreak of the coronavirus in Wuhan, China, last week. (China Daily/Reuters)

Speeding up research into drugs and vaccines for coronavirus is a priority for the World Health Organization's efforts to contain the outbreak centred in China.

An advanced team from the United Nations's global public health organization met inBeijing on Wednesday. They're aiming to learn more about the virus itself as well as China's unprecedented response.

At a briefing in Genevaon Tuesday, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the development of therapies is an important public health priority, but not the only one.

"We have to do everything today using the available weapons to fight this virus," he said. Current weapons include standard hygiene measures like frequent handwashing.

Doctors and other health-care workers fighting the coronavirus outbreak in China don't have any specific treatments to use against this newvirus. When they try to treat severe cases, they're walking a tightrope aiming to find just the right level of immune response to kill the virus without setting off other problems.

China has had more than 1,000 deaths and40,000 cases of the illness, now called COVID-19. The rest of the world has less than 400 cases with one death confirmed outside China.

It will be important to determine which patients need higher levels of care compared with those who are best off isolating themselves at home to limit the number of exposures, said Dr. Jerome Leis. (CBC)

The virus causes respiratory symptoms, such as cough and fever.

Dr. Jerome Leis and his team treated Canada's first case at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto last month. The man in his 50s initially had some X-rayfindings that clinicians were concerned might worsen.

"After they were admitted, theydid gradually improve and eventually their symptoms resolved completely," said Leis, referring to the man. "I think this story highlights, although we have seen poor outcomes related to this infection, including fatalities, those are the exception, not the rule."

A key difference from flu

Themanreceived blood tests and fluids. Doctors were prepared to give oxygen, but he didn't need it.

As withhis patient, Leis said chest X-rays of the lungs of patients hospitalized in China wereusuallyabnormal.

"The novel coronavirus is a lot like influenza in terms of how it presents," Leis said. "And yet a key difference is we don't have an antiviral that can really be used to treat patients, which is useful in limiting the spread of influenza in hospitals. This is definitely an area of very active research."

Medical staff move a coronavirus patient into the isolation ward in a hospital in Wuhan last week. (Barcroft Media/Getty)

For Leis, another critical area for medical researchers to try to determine is which patients will need higher levels of care compared with those who are best off isolating themselves at home to limit the number of exposures. That's particularly important for those hospitalized in Wuhan, China, where health-care workers seem to be hard hit.

In a case series published last week on 138 hospitalized patients in Wuhan, more than a quarter needed to be treated in intensive care and many needed invasive ventilator support.

Dr. Preeti Malani is a professor of infectious diseases at the University of Michigan and a journal editor who wrote a JAMA viewpoint offering a snapshot on the outbreak for clinicians. Malani said doctors and scientists are getting data from China about the cases but more context is needed.

"Are those previous diagnoses that are [just]now being confirmed?" Malani said. "Same thing with the deaths. Are those people who've recently become ill, or are those people who've been ill for some time?"

Sometimes symptoms, such as cough and fever, can be mild initially and then the more severe pneumonia develops a few days later, she said.

You don't want immune response 'to go crazy'

Estimatedcoronavirusdeath rates of threeto fourper cent are probably based on the sickest individuals, with the risk of hospitalization and death likely higher for those aged 50 and higher, she said.

There is no specific treatment or vaccine approved for use in the outbreak. For now, doctors in China use a trial-and-error process, reserving existing antiviral medications and other treatments such as corticosteroidsfor the sickest patients.

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"The tendency is to say, 'Well, let's give it a try,'" Malani said. "Among people who get better, it's hard to say how much of that was from the antiviral versus just people's own bodies."

Corticosteroids, such as prednisone, didn't work to fight two other coronavirus infections, SARS and MERS, and WHOdoesn't recommend it for COVID-19.

Matthew Miller, who studies viruses and immune responses to viruses at McMaster University, called corticosteroids a blunt sledgehammer often used to treat inflammation.

A patient surnamed Jia, centre, who was cured of pneumonia from the new coronavirus infection, walks out of the ward with medical staff in Zouping City in China's Shandong province. (Costfoto/Barcroft Media/Getty)

Normally, when someone is infected with a respiratory virus, the patient's immune system kicks in to fight off and kill the virus. But data fromearly cases in China suggest thatthe culprit in people who were severely sickened in the coronavirus outbreak is often an overactive immune response.

"You need your immune response to still be functional because you want your immune response to kill the virus," Miller said. "You just don't want it going crazy."

When there's a massive immune response, the patient can suffer more damage than healing, and problems such as breathing difficulties can be exacerbated. Similar overactive immune responses were reported during the H1N1 flu pandemic.

In a tight balancing act, some of the experimental antivirals target inflammatory proteins thathelp get rid of excess inflammation can lead to severe symptoms, such as breathing difficulty, he said.

In China, scientists are researching and developing a potential vaccine, as well as looking at a specific immunoglobulin or blood product to use in critically ill patients and screening antiviral drugs.

Chinese scientists are testingtwo antiviral drugs against the new coronavirus, and preliminaryclinical trial results are weeks away, Dr. Marie-Paule Kieny, a former WHO virologist who co-chaired the meeting, said on Wednesday.

Kieny said a number of patients have already beendosed with a combination of the antiviral drugs ritonavir andlopinavir. The combination is available in generic form to treat HIV.

As in severe cases in China, the first patient treated in the United States, a 35-year-old man from Washington state who had visited Wuhan, was treated with intravenous remdesivir an experimental antiviral that works against other RNA viruses, such as SARS, MERS and respiratory syncytial virus in animal models. He recovered, but it's not known if the antiviral helped him.

"We will have to wait for a few weeks whether this [remdesivir] givesany positive signal," in Chinese research, Kieny said.