As Ebola Spreads in Two More Provinces, NanoViricides Has Received National Ethics Committee Approval for a Phase II Clinical Trial of NV-387 Oral Gummies as a Treatment for Ebola in Congo
SHELTON, CT / ACCESS Newswire / July 13, 2026 / NanoViricides, Inc. (NYSE American:NNVC) (the “Company”), a clinical stage leader developing antiviral drugs that viruses cannot escape, announces that it has received National Ethics Committee approval for a Phase II Clinical Trial of NV-387 Oral Gummies as a Treatment for the Current Bundibugyo Ebolavirus in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The Company is now getting ready to file a Clinical Trial Application to ACOREP, the regulatory agency in DRC.
NanoViricides has already put together a team with a renowned Principal Investigator and with support from a well known University in the Ebola-affected region for the execution of this clinical trial after regulatory approvals.
NV-387 Oral Gummies Drug Product has already been shipped to DRC, because of the ensuing Phase II clinical trial of NV-387 for the Treatment of Mpox. Sufficient quantity of NV-387 drug product is thus available in DRC for starting the clinical trial against Ebola as well.
The Ebola outbreak in the DRC continues to increase in spread. It has spread to two more northeastern provinces, Haut-Uele and Tshopo, and number of confirmed Ebola cases across the country rose to 1,926, including 702 deaths, official data showed late on Sunday, the country’s public health institute said in its latest report [1].
There is no approved Treatment or Vaccine for the new variant of the Bundibugyo Ebolavirus (BDBV) that is causing the current rapidly expanding outbreak of the Ebolavirus Disease (EVD) in DR Congo and Uganda. The rare Bundibugyo strain of Ebola virus causing the current outbreak appears to be its new variant, likely freshly introduced from some animal source[2], such as fruit bats.
NV-387 is the only orally active agent under consideration for clinical trial as a treatment of Ebola to the best of our knowledge. In an epidemic scenario in resource limited settings such as in DRC, oral drug is a highly advantageous feature.
“We believe NV-387 could be revolutionary in this fight against Ebola, if it is found to be effective,” said Anil R. Diwan, PhD, adding, “It is an oral drug, in contrast to other infusions. Thus evaluating if NV-387 treatment works is of paramount importance to combat this and future Ebola and Marburg outbreaks.”
Other treatments require infusions. Infusions are difficult to implement and also are not scalable in a large outbreak scenario if this Ebola virus outbreak continues to grow, as has been widely expected.
A clinical trial of an antibody cocktail MBP134, alongside MBP134 plus Remdesivir, has started as per WHO with first patient having received infusion of the antibody cocktail on July 2, 2026 [3]. Monoclonal antibodies are highly specific to the strain of virus and usually are not effective against unrelated strains.
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