Debate heats up in the US over using hydroxychloroquine to treat COVID-19 patients

Washington: United States President Donald Trump and members of his administration are growing emphatic in promoting an anti-malaria drug not yet officially approved for fighting COVID-19, even though scientists say more testing is needed before it is proved safe and effective against the virus.

Donald Trump trade adviser Peter Navarro promoted the drug, hydroxychloroquine, in a television interview Monday, a day after Trump publicly put his faith in the drug to lessen the toll of the coronavirus pandemic. “What do I know, I’m not a doctor,” Trump told reporters Sunday. “But I have common sense.”

The administration’s promotion of the drug comes after a heated ‘Situation Room’ meeting of the White House’s coronavirus task force Saturday, in which Navarro challenged the top US infectious disease expert Dr Anthony Fauci over his concerns about recommending the drug based only on unscientific anecdotal evidence.

Navarro, who has no formal medical training, erupted at Fauci, raising his voice and claiming that the reports of studies he collected were enough to recommend the drug widely, according to a person familiar with the exchange who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the blow-up.

Fauci has repeatedly said that current studies provide only anecdotal findings that the drug works. Navarro told CNN: “I would have two words for you: ‘second opinion’.”

Hydroxychloroquine is officially approved for treating malaria, rheumatoid arthritis and lupus, but not COVID-19. Small, preliminary studies have suggested it might help prevent the coronavirus from entering cells and possibly help patients clear the virus sooner.

Two reports gave mixed results. A series of 11 patients in France found that an antibiotic-malaria drug combo did not improve how fast patients cleared the virus or their symptoms. Researchers in China reported that cough, pneumonia and fever seemed to improve sooner among 31 patients given hydroxychloroquine compared to 31 others who did not get the drug, but fewer people in the comparison group had cough or fevers to start with.

Navarro told ‘Fox & Friends’ that doctors in New York hospitals are already giving out the drug to COVID-19 patients and that healthcare workers are taking it in hopes it will protect them from being infected. He said the weekend standoff with Fauci was about whether the administration should take 29 million doses of the drug in FEMA warehouses and send them to hard-hit cities.

“The media is trying to blow it up as a big debate, but I can tell you that within the room the decision was a sound one, and it was unanimous,” Navarro said.

Asked about his credentials for pushing the drug, Navarro cited his doctorate in social science. “In the fog of war, we might take more risks than we otherwise would. And, given the track record of the drug over many years in treating malaria that there are side effects but it’s been used a lot in lesser doses, the decision has been made by many doctors to prescribe it,” Navarro said. “If it saves lives, that’s a beautiful thing… I think history will judge who’s right on this debate. I’d bet on President Trump’s intuition on this one.”

AP

 

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