The Wall Street Journal: Florida and Texas are turning to antibody treatments as COVID-19 cases surge

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Doctors are increasingly turning to antibody drugs in a bid to keep hospitals from being overwhelmed by a surge of Covid-19 cases, a turnabout after months in which the treatments went mostly unused.

Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc.
REGN,
+0.98%
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the primary provider of the treatments, delivered 135,023 drug doses to U.S. healthcare providers last week, a ninefold increase from a month earlier, according to data shared by the company with The Wall Street Journal.

Regeneron estimates that as recently as June, fewer than 5% of high-risk patients were receiving treatment, before increasing recently to as much as 30%, said Chief Executive Leonard Schleifer in an interview. The drugs, which have been shown to prevent hospitalizations, are paid for by the federal government, and distributed to patients free of charge.

The uptick in demand is being driven by the surge of infections, especially in the southern U.S., where vaccination rates are relatively low. Some states, including Florida, Texas and Mississippi, have rushed to expand antibody-drug infusion centers and, in some cases, have allowed high-risk patients to receive treatment without seeing a doctor first.

An expanded version of this article appears on WSJ.com.

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