President Donald Trump had been hyping the antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine as a potential coronavirus treatment, which led to Detroit heading up the first large-scale study of the drug
as a potential preventive measure against COVID-19 at Henry Ford Health
System. However, in recent weeks the drug has seen a string of bad
publicity: Trump revealed he had secretly been taking it, shocking
medical professionals due to the drug’s potential adverse effects for
people with heart conditions, and then a within a week announced he was
no longer taking it. Then, on Monday, the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration withdrew its emergency use authorization for
hydroxychloroquine for COVID-19 patients.
Henry Ford Health System, however, says the FDA’s new reversal does
not impact its study, which is is expected to wrap up in July.
The FDA’s decision bars the use of hydroxychloroquine sulfate and a
similar drug called chloroquine phosphate from the Strategic National
Stockpile for hospitalized COVID-19 patients. But the use of the drug as
a prophylaxis, or preventive measure, is not impacted by the FDA
decision.
“The ongoing WHIP COVID-19 study is an FDA-approved study looking at
hydroxychloroquine as a potential preventative medication for healthy,
pre-screened individuals,” Dr. Steven Kalkanis, chief executive officer
of the Henry Ford Medical Group, told Metro Times in a statement
on Monday. “It is not affected by the FDA’s decision today, and there is
no evidence that the use of hydroxychloroquine as a potential
prophylaxis presents a health risk in that setting.”
Kalkanis says hydroxychloroquine has been used as a treatment in
hospitalized patients, which falls under the FDA’s Monday directive. The
early results of a retrospective study looking at the drug as a
treatment look promising, but the results are not final and still
pending peer review.
“We have analyzed our data and have seen a significantly improved
outcome in a group of COVID-19 patients who received
hydroxychloroquine,” he said.
In response to the FDA decision, Henry Ford Health System suspended
the use of hydroxychloroquine as a COVID-19 treatment outside of
clinical trials.
“The safety and wellbeing of our patients remains our top priority
and we will continue to monitor all available data regarding safety and
outcomes and adjust accordingly,” Kalkanis said.
Another study at University of Michigan is also still moving forward.
On Tuesday, officials announced potential in another drug. Scientists at the University of Oxford said a steroid called dexamethasone was found to reduce the number of deaths in hospitalized COVID-19 patients.
https://www.metrotimes.com/news-hits/archives/2020/06/16/henry-ford-health-system-still-moving-forward-with-hydroxychloroquine-study
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.