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Medicine

New Nasal Spray Prevents Covid Infection in Ferrets, Study Finds (nytimes.com) 90

The New York Times reports: A nasal spray that blocks the absorption of the SARS-CoV-2 virus has completely protected ferrets it was tested on, according to a small study released on Thursday by an international team of scientists. The study, which was limited to animals and has not yet been peer-reviewed, was assessed by several health experts at the request of The New York Times.

If the spray, which the scientists described as nontoxic and stable, is proved to work in humans, it could provide a new way of fighting the pandemic. A daily spritz up the nose would act like a vaccine.

Snard (Slashdot reader #61,584) shared Columbia's announcement: The compound in the spray — a lipopeptide developed by Anne Moscona, MD, and Matteo Porotto, PhD, professors in the Department of Pediatrics and directors of the Center for Host-Pathogen Interaction — is designed to prevent the new coronavirus from entering host cells. The antiviral lipopeptide is inexpensive to produce, has a long shelf life, and does not require refrigeration. These features make it stand out from other antiviral approaches under development, including monoclonal antibodies. The new nasal lipopeptide could be ideal for halting the spread of COVID in the United States and globally; the transportable and stable compound could be especially key in rural, low-income, and hard-to-reach populations.

A preprint of the study appeared in bioRxiv on November 5; a paper describing a first generation of the compound and its effect in a 3D model of the human lung first appeared in the journal mBio on October 20. In this human lung model, the compound was able to extinguish an initial infection, prevent spread of the virus within the lung, and was not at all toxic to the airway cells.

Ferrets are often used in studies of respiratory diseases because the lungs of these animals and humans are similar... The antiviral is easily administered and, based on the scientists' experience with other respiratory viruses, protection would be immediate and last for at least 24 hours.

The scientists hope to rapidly advance the preventative approach to human trials with the goal of containing transmission during this pandemic.

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New Nasal Spray Prevents Covid Infection in Ferrets, Study Finds

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  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @04:36PM (#60700470)

    If you mandated passengers take this, it could provide a lot of confidence from both passengers, and ports that cruise ships were safe to operate again...

    • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Sunday November 08, 2020 @04:38PM (#60700476)

      "If you mandated passengers take this"

      Nobody _wants_ to save the cruise industry.

      • I am curious as to what sort of nonsense would fill the void left in the world of telephone spam...
      • He meant the passengers.

        Gotta care for the mentally disabled too, you know! :)

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Powercntrl ( 458442 )

        Nobody _wants_ to save the cruise industry.

        They pollute heavily, the ships are registered in foreign ports, and they primarily hire non-US crews.

        The cruise industry going belly up would absolutely be an epic win. My apologies to the folks who find it entertaining to be trapped in a floating hotel for a week.

        • They pollute heavily

          Not true any more (though it was for sure true for a time).

          the ships are registered in foreign ports

          Still largely true but it seems rather elitist of you to want to prevent poor countries from getting money.

          My apologies to the folks who find it entertaining to be trapped in a floating hotel for a week.

          You haven not been in modern cruise ships I see, it's more like a floating Vegas than a floating hotel. They have a ton of different activities, and depending on the cruise ship a huge ran

          • Its literally the least expensive vacation you can do, especially if you take advantage of the first 2 weeks in December, January, February, and first week or two in march. I have managed to get deals for 6 day cruises for super cheap for a family of four. It has taken me to many islands in the Caribbean. I was in the Navy for 6 years, never thought I would want to ever set foot an another ship. But the water in the Caribbean is some of the bluest water I have seen almost anywhere I the world.

            What I dont r

            • Its literally the least expensive vacation you can do

              Cheaper than backpacking in a national forest?

              Pot smokers are out of luck. It's still federally banned so still not allowed onboard.

              When you are on a foreign-flagged ship in international waters, American federal law should not be relevant.

              • Cheaper than backpacking in a national forest?

                Compatible, yes. Considering how much decent backpacking gear and food costs, and the cost of getting to that forest for most people. Cruises can be just a few hundred $, if you live near a port you can find even cheaper last minute deals. 90% of people would enjoy the cruise a lot more as well.

                When you are on a foreign-flagged ship in international waters, American federal law should not be relevant.

                A huge reason why they don't allow pot even in internationa

              • Well they have to board in the US, and port authority is a federal jurisdiction. Another issue is they often are in port in other countries. So if you were to do something illegal in that port (like smoke pot) they would be required to turn you over to the local authorities. There was an article about just that happening on a Norwegian cruiseline ship last year. But not only do they have to worry about you bringing it aboard but taking it off right? You technically become guilty of smuggling if you re-ente

            • What I dont recommend is getting on an older smaller ship since the amenities are rather limited. The cruise ships I liked the best were the Oasis class ones.

              I generally agree here, for most destinations the larger newer ships have way more amenities and are also lots cleaner for the world around them... I have been on Oasis class ships specifically myself and really liked them.

              I would say for Alaska specifically, sometimes a very small ship is better (few hundred people or less, instead of thousands) as t

    • by Jfetjunky ( 4359471 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @05:08PM (#60700578)
      I mean, yeah.. Thats definitely not where my mind went though. No offense to the cruise industry, but our first priority should be the general population. I'll worry about people being able to get plastered and eat gluttonous amounts of food on a boat after people can once again be able to provide housing and food for themselves.
      • It takes a huge staff to run those ships. There's a lot of people out of work right now. I know people like to assume that "industry" refers to a few rich people, but it doesn't. You want people to make a living, then they need jobs.
      • after people can once again be able to provide housing and food for themselves.

        Does that include the 300000 crew members on cruiseships worldwide? Or the millions employed by the industry on the whole?

    • If you mandated passengers take this, it could provide a lot of confidence from both passengers, and ports that cruise ships were safe to operate again...

      To my knowledge, ferrets don't take many cruises. Then again, neither do I so maybe I'm wrong ...

      • I think they've been afraid to because of the threat of Covid. Now they'll be all over the ships, hunting voles and wigging out.
      • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

        Where would cruise ship entertainment be without the man who puts ferrets down his trousers?

    • Screw the cruise industry, and the cinemas too. They’re just dead wood that needed to be cleared.

      Times change. No one mourns for the loss of the discos and Blockbuster Video stores, the same will it be for cruise lines and cinemas.

      • No one mourns for the loss of the discos and Blockbuster Video stores

        Nobody misses Blockbuster, but there are people out there who miss disco. Not many, but there really are some people who are nostalgic about the 70s.

        • Not many, but there really are some people who are nostalgic about the 70s.

          And some of us have the clothes to prove it ;-}

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      There's an Icelandic company that already has such a prophylactic spray on the market [grapevine.is]. It's based around neem oil and St. John's wort oil, both of which have (contact) antiviral properties.

      Basically, it's like hand sanitizer for your nose and throat that persists for a couple hours. Our main national hospital has been testing it since April, and the results have been promising thusfar.

    • I think a bigger "save" for this could be the restaurant industry.

      We've made a point of regulary getting takeout from all our usual haunts - and perhaps everyone else is doing that as well. But when I walk in to pick up our meals, most of those restaurants seem pretty quiet.

      • by vanyel ( 28049 )

        I've been doing the take out thing as well; not looking forward to adding up the total for this year, but I can afford it better than the staff can afford getting laid off...

  • by rossdee ( 243626 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @04:40PM (#60700482)

    I am sure that people who farm ferrets, or those that have them as pets, will be happy.

    I remember an old radio comedy show that had a thing about ferrets:

    I'm sorry, I'll read that again.

    • I am sure that people who farm ferrets, or those that have them as pets, will be happy.

      And the people who farm minks (also mustelids) in Denmark will be very unhappy that this research did not happen sooner.

    • Social distancing might work also, but they tend to follow you around.
      First you have to shake the weasel.
  • Amazing... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by beheaderaswp ( 549877 ) * on Sunday November 08, 2020 @04:48PM (#60700516)

    Well- that's quite an accomplishment.

    Though I'm more impressed that they taught ferrets how to *use* nasal spray.

    We can't even get humans to wear masks....

    • The trick is that you can imprison and force them.

      Basically "We can cure Covid! In China!"

      Though frankly, while yes, people are stupid, I DO see the majority to wear masks. So... I love bashing humans, but if this works, this is gonna work!

  • by mandark1967 ( 630856 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @04:48PM (#60700518) Homepage Journal

    is pleased.

  • Antivirals as a preventative for general population? Uh... yeah, wouldn't hold much hope for that plan working out. It does sound like it could make for an effective treatment though.
    • Don't just think of US corporate interests.

      I highly doubt most of the world will give a fuck. E.g. if necessary, China and the like will simply mandate it for the entire population, and be done with it.
      Russia will laugh all the way to mass-production and a big finger to the US.
      The EU will probably pay some kind of lip service by paying the inventors a nice stack of money, if they agree, or just make it themselves if they don't, and be done with it.
      And Biden's not the type to lead walking over dead bodies fo

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      IIUC, it's not exactly an antiviral so much as something to prevent initial infection. It wouldn't be perfect, but whenever the R factor started climbing, people could be instructed to use it and shove it back down to near zero.

    • Is a good antiviral, been thinking about that for awhile.
  • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @05:09PM (#60700584)

    Does anyone in the scientific community know, what I must do, to automatically get notified, whenever somebody peer-reviews this?
    I'm assuming it would appear on that biorxiv page. So all I need is to add my e-mail address or something to an event listener.

    We're sitting on insane amounts of computing power here. I'm sure there must be a way to add a URI to a list that is triggered when certain events like added peer reviews happen ...

    • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

      Peer review isn't an isolated event. It happens in the context of journal publication, so the event you want to watch for is the paper being published (as opposed to released in pre-print form, which is what biorxiv is about). The straightforward way to be notified would be to set up an alert on Google Scholar [google.com] with a search query which includes the key terms in the title and a distinctive surname from among the authors.

  • A drug company has figured out a way to turn COVID-19 into a steady income stream. You can write off any hope for a vaccine now, nobody wants to kill their cash cow, the other drug companies will pivot to this model now.

    • Conspiracy theory. Even if there is no vaccine, the pandemic will probably ends by itself in 2-4 years and I bet it will be before this spray is approved and fully available. Not a good business plan.
  • Will it work for mouth-breathers?
  • .... you start looking at the problems associated with regular nasal spray usage [wikipedia.org]. And they are talking about using it daily?

    Can I take a hard pass on that?

    • by aXis100 ( 690904 )

      Seriously? It's a completely class of drug with a completely different active ingredient. What on earth makes you think it will cause the same side-effects?

    • Your reference is for nasal sprays containing vasoconstrictor decongestants. The active molecule described by this topic article is not a vasoconstrictor. It is a small peptide, a 4-long polyethylene glycol, and cholesterol.
      • by mark-t ( 151149 )
        I was not aware that the problem was peculiar to decongestants, I thought it was a general problem created by forcing aerosol into the nostrils.
  • That was and is still a vector into the bloodstream.

    • Well, I dunno... how about eye drops, maybe?

    • That could be a concern if we all start rubbing our eyes against each other, in a bizarre twist on the handshake concept.

      Assuming that doesn't happen, it's extremely unlikely that you will catch covid through your eyes from someone who doesn't have covid. Somebody who doesn't have covid because they didn't catch it from breathing it in.

      The number of people who will have covid two weeks from now can be computed as the number who have it today X the rate of transmission. Suppose that today 1,000 people in a p

    • Along these lines, there's a lot of what ifs..

      Eyes, mouth, is fomite transmission a concern? (Or can we at least stop sanitizing everything?)

      I guess it helps, but kinda sound like standing in a stream as an attempt to dam it.

    • Spray it in your eyes. No problem. I'm sure there will be no side effects.
    • by Xenna ( 37238 )

      Is there any evidence that this is a real problem in the case of SARS-Cov2?

      AFAIK, there's still a lot of uncertainty about real life transmission. To me it looks like everything is pointing more and more towards nasal transmission only.

  • Nice findings, but it'll take time to work out. It's also going to be patent protected, and the licensing process may add additional time. Time=Lives Lost.

    In the meantime, this is proven, published research about a simple home procedure known to inhibit the coronavirus family: "Hypertonic saline nasal irrigation and gargling should be considered as a treatment option for COVID-19" [nih.gov] . i.e. Irrigate your nose, and gargle, with boiled (and cooled), very-salty water.

    Here's how you do the procedure:
    http://www.elvisstudy.com/nasa... [elvisstudy.com]

  • weasels (Score:4, Interesting)

    by FarmerInTheDellCompu ( 6525054 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @06:35PM (#60700826)

    Ferrets are weasel-like and so are minks. Could this save the danish mink industry?

  • We already had a 100% hugely effective nasal spray for COVID. Lysol. You know, it kills COVID on surfaces, so just a little bit into the lungs, washed down with a nice big glass of chloroquine, will make you right as rain. We all know this works, because our fearless leader told us it would.

    Wait, I think I just figured out why the election went the way it did.
    • We already had a 100% hugely effective nasal spray for COVID. Lysol. You know, it kills COVID on surfaces, so just a little bit into the lungs, washed down with a nice big glass of chloroquine, ...

      You forgot the bright lights. It won't work without the light.

    • I read on Facebook and Twitter that castor oil is very effective against TDS. You should try it.
  • Maybe one of you can tell me how often ferrets rub their eyes, pick their noses or bite their fingernails? My guess is that this will be minimally effective with humans. Besides that, the release of this as a treatment option will make it very difficult to tell which of the maskless people you come across are using the product and which of them are just anti-maskers.
  • The politicians voted funding to protect *weasels* from COVID.

  • If this spray works with Minks, then it can save the fur industry in Denmark and Spain. Imagine how profitable that can be...
  • even the goddamn ferret-scientists are ahead of us
  • So it works, and it lasts 24 hours, thus has to be readministered frequently? I assume we'll be trading in the KN95s for Bane masks, then?

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