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Hong Kong's only remedy for Ebola is a breast cancer drug

A breast cancer drug is the only possible remedy Hong Kong has for an Ebola outbreak after the city was denied supplies of other drugs being tested against the deadly virus.

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Centre for Health Protection controller Dr Leung Ting-hung stressed that while the possibility of a large-scale outbreak occurring in Hong Kong was "highly unlikely", there was a risk of Ebola reaching the city. Photo: Edward Wong

A breast cancer drug is the only possible remedy Hong Kong has for an Ebola outbreak after the city was denied supplies of other drugs being tested against the deadly virus.

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The medicine, which has shown promise in treating Ebola infections in mice, has never been tested in humans for this purpose. Supplies of other drugs are being kept for patients already infected in the biggest outbreak of the disease now afflicting West Africa.

A government scientific committee on emerging diseases met yesterday to draw up a contingency plan to fight Ebola should the outbreak reach Hong Kong.

It decided to recommend to the government that in such an event, it should use the breast cancer drug, oestrogen receptor antagonist.

Committee chairman Professor Yuen Kwok-yung said the medicine had proved safe for patients with breast cancer and infertility problems.

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"It causes mild side effects in these patients, such as nausea, headache and dizziness," he said.

Any use of the medicine for Ebola would require an ethics test and patient consent.

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