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Monday, January 17, 2022

Arkansas inmates unknowingly given ivermectin to treat COVID-19, lawsuit says

 

  • The ACLU filed a lawsuit against the Washington County Detention Center and its health care provider, Karas Correctional Health, on behalf of four inmates who say they were prescribed ivermectin without their knowledge.
  • Karas Correctional Health had been administering ivermectin to inmates in the facility since November 2020, according to the lawsuit.
  • The FDA has said it does not recommend using ivermectin to treat or prevent COVID-19. Misuse of this drug, intended to treat some parasitic worms, can have serious consequences.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Arkansas filed a lawsuit against a county jail and its health care provider on behalf of four inmates who say they were given the controversial drug ivermectin to treat COVID-19 without their knowledge or consent.

The inmates at the Washington County Detention Center in Arkansas were told after testing positive for COVID-19 in August that their treatment consisted of “vitamins,” “antibiotics,” and/or “steroids,” according to the lawsuit, which was filed Thursday. Instead, they were reportedly given an unknown dose of ivermectin over a period of days or weeks.

According to the suit, ivermectin had been used to treat COVID-19 within the facility as early as November 2020 – a fact which only came to light in August 2021, when Washington County Sheriff Tim Helder confirmed that the facility’s health care provider, Karas Correctional Health, had been prescribing ivermectin to treat COVID-19.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration does not recommend taking the anti-parasitic drug to prevent or treat COVID-19, despite claims to the contrary from influential media personalities like Joe Rogan.

Merck, the company that makes ivermectin, said in February that there is "no scientific basis for a potential therapeutic effect against COVID-19" and that the majority of studies about the drug's potential effect on COVID have a "concerning lack of safety data."

Ivermectin has been approved by the FDA for the treatment of some parasitic worms in humans and animals, but misuse of ivermectin can cause serious harm, including seizures and hepatitis.

“Without knowing and voluntary consent, plaintiffs ingested incredibly high doses of a drug that credible medical professionals, the FDA, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, all agree is not an effective treatment against COVID-19, and that if given in large doses is dangerous for humans,” the lawsuit says.

According to the lawsuit, “high doses” is “no hyperbole” and inmates were in some cases given up to 6 times the approved dosage of ivermectin. Each of the four inmates in the suit suffered side effects including vision issues, diarrhea, and stomach cramps.

“No one - including incarcerated individuals - should be deceived and subject to medical experimentation. Sheriff Helder has a responsibility to provide food, shelter, and safe, appropriate care to incarcerated individuals,” Gary Sullivan, legal director of the ACLU of Arkansas, said in a statement.

“The detention center failed to use safe and appropriate treatments for COVID-19, even in the midst of a pandemic, and they must be held accountable,” he said.

The Arkansas State Medical Board has already been investigating complaints against Karas over the WCDC’s use of ivermectin, which it is expected to discuss at an upcoming meeting in February, the Associated Press reported.

In a September letter sent by his attorney, Dr. Robert Karas, who owns Karas Correctional Health, told a Medical Board investigator that 254 WCDC inmates had been treated with ivermectin, according to the AP.

The Washington County Sheriff's Office did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

https://thehill.com/changing-america/respect/equality/590046-arkansas-inmates-unknowingly-given-ivermectin-to-treat

India’s Gennova Working on Omicron-Specific COVID-19 Vaccine

 India’s Gennova Biopharmaceuticals is working on an omicron-specific COVID-19 vaccine candidate that could be ready in a month or two, a person with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

The source, who did not want to be named as the information was private, said the product might need a small trial in India before it could be rolled out as a booster or standalone vaccine.

A representative for Gennova, a unit of drugmaker Emcure Pharmaceuticals that does business in some 70 countries, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Pfizer Inc said last week a redesigned COVID-19 vaccine that specifically targets the omicron coronavirus variant could be ready to launch by March.

The source said Gennova on Friday separately submitted to India’s drug regulator phase 2 trial data for its original mRNA vaccine candidate. The government said last year that product was found to be “safe, tolerable, and immunogenic” in the participants of an initial study.

If given emergency-use approval, this would be the country’s first mRNA COVID-19 vaccine like the ones developed by Pfizer and Moderna.

https://science.thewire.in/health/gennova-developing-covid-19-vaccine-specifically-omicron-variant/

Pakistan: 'Trial of Chinese traditional medicine for COVID-19 successful'

 Pakistani health authorities on Monday (Jan 17) announced the completion of a successful clinical trial of Chinese traditional herbal medicine for treating COVID-19, as the South Asian nation enters a fifth wave of the pandemic driven by the Omicron variant.

The Chinese medicine, Jinhua Qinggan Granules (JHQG) manufactured by Juxiechang (Beijing) Pharmaceutical Co Ltd, is already being used in the treatment of COVID-19 patients in China.

"Since it was tried on patients with different variants of COVID-19, we expect it to be effective on Omicron as on other variants," Professor Iqbal Chaudhry, director of the International Center for Chemical and Biological Science (ICCBS) where trials were conducted, told reporters.

The trials were conducted on 300 patients who were treated at home, and would work on mild to moderate COVID-19 cases, Dr Raza Shah, principal investigator in the trials, told reporters, adding that the efficacy rate was around 82.67 per cent.

The trials were approved by the Drug Regulatory Authority Pakistan.

Pakistan reported 4,340 COVID-19 cases on Monday, the highest recorded in a 24-hour period in three months.

Karachi, the country's largest city, recorded a positivity rate the percentage of tests coming back positive, of 39.39 per cent at the weekend, the highest so far.

"In the last seven days, COVID cases in Pakistan have increased by 170 per cent while deaths have also increased by 62 per cent," the National Command Operation Centre (NCOC), which is overseeing the pandemic response, said in a tweet on Monday.

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/pakistan-trial-chinese-traditional-medicine-covid-19-2441121

Texas rabbi says he escaped after throwing chair at hostage-taker

 The Texas rabbi who was held hostage with three congregants at his synagogue on Saturday said he escaped after throwing a chair at the hostage-taker.

Rabbi Charlie Cytron-Walker of Congregation Beth Israel in Colleyville, Texas, told "CBS Mornings" on Monday that things "didn't look good" or "sound good" in the last hour of the standoff because the hostage-taker "wasn't getting what he wanted." He said he and the remaining hostages were "terrified."

Cytron-Walker said that once he saw a good opportunity for the three remaining hostages to escape, he threw a chair at the gunman and ran for the exit.

"When I saw an opportunity where he wasn't in a good position I asked, made sure that the two gentlemen who were still with me, that they were, that they were ready to go, the exit wasn't too far away. I told them to go, I threw a chair at the gunman and I headed for the door, and all three of us were able to get out without even a shot being fired," Cytron-Walker said.

One of the congregants held hostage had been released prior to the rabbi and other two fleeing.

In an earlier statement, Cytron-Walker said security courses his congregation participated in over the years prepared him to act and flee during Saturday's incident.

"We are alive because of that education," the rabbi said, pointing to courses from the Colleyville Police Department, the FBI, the Anti-Defamation League and the Secure Community Network.

The hostage-taker, later identified as British national Malik Faisal Akram, 44, was killed after the hostages had fled the synagogue following the hours-long standoff.

Matthew DeSarno, the special agent in charge of the FBI's Dallas Field Office, said Akram appears to be the only individual involved in the hostage-taking. On Sunday night, however, British police arrested two teenagers in connection to the ongoing investigation.

The situation started Saturday morning. Cytron-Walker told "CBS Mornings" that the hostage-taker knocked on the door of the synagogue, which made him think that the man was in need of shelter. The rabbi let him inside and made him a cup of tea.


As the two started talking, Cytron-Walker said some parts of the man's story "didn't quite add up," which made him "a little bit curious," but he said such details were "not necessarily an uncommon thing."

When they were praying, however, the rabbi said had his back towards the man - following a Jewish tradition that individuals face in the direction of Jerusalem when praying - and eventually heard a click, which was from his gun.

None of the hostages were physically injured during the standoff, but they were "threatened the entire time," according to Cytron-Walker.

The Joint Terrorism Task Force is now investigating the hostage situation, according to the FBI. The bureau said the incident was "a terrorism-related matter, in which the Jewish community was targeted, and is being investigated by the Joint Terrorism Task Force."

"We never lose sight of the threat extremists pose to the Jewish community and to other religious, racial, and ethnic groups," the FBI added.

https://sports.yahoo.com/texas-rabbi-says-escaped-throwing-173302710.html

Medicare steps into heated debate about how to improve equity in Alzheimer’s treatment

 Medicare’s proposal to restrict access to a controversial Alzheimer’s drug has quickly reignited a long-simmering debate over how best to address ongoing, systemic inequities in Alzheimer’s care experienced by Black and Hispanic patients.

Medicare on Tuesday put forth a draft plan to only cover Aduhelm for patients enrolled in a randomized clinical trial. Biogen, the company behind the drug, and major Alzheimer’s patient groups all panned the proposal, saying it would make it harder for vulnerable populations to access the medicine. The Alzheimer’s Association called it “shocking discrimination.”

They note that only a limited number of people can enter a clinical trial, and that those clinical trials are likely to occur at major medical institutions, which are more often located in wealthy, white areas of the country. Lower-income patients, too, might struggle to access the drug if they can’t drum up nearly $30,000 to pay for it out of pocket.

There is good reason to highlight those concerns. Black and Hispanic people are significantly more likely to develop Alzheimer’s than white people but are far more often excluded from clinical trials. And even when they can participate, Black individuals were 35% less likely to be diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, despite the fact that they are estimated to be twice as likely as white individuals to develop the condition, according to a 2021 study.

But STAT spoke to several of the nation’s top researchers on the racial disparities in Alzheimer’s disease and they uniformly argued that increasing access to the new therapy would only have a minimal impact on addressing health inequities. Several even praised Medicare’s proposal because, they said, it would help gather needed data on how well Aduhelm works in people of color.

“Many of us who actively work in inclusive dementia spaces are in broad agreement: [Medicare’s] decision to cover Aduhelm in clinical trials is the best incentive to determine whether it even works in women and people of color,” tweeted Jonathan Jackson, executive director of the Community Access, Recruitment, and Engagement Research Center at Massachusetts General Hospital, who added in an interview with STAT that regulators “absolutely did make the right decision” given the lack of representation of people of color in Biogen’s original clinical trial.

The debate underscores the rift in the Alzheimer’s community over the best way to address these persistent inequities. Advocacy organizations see any effort to keep patients waiting for the drug as creating a two-tiered system. But academics STAT spoke to felt that advocacy organizations’ efforts would be better spent addressing more systemic issues, like overcoming the obstacles that keep Black and brown people out of Alzheimer’s clinical trials or from receiving a proper Alzheimer’s diagnosis.

Several also vociferously criticized the advocacy organizations’ statements about health equity.

“It’s painful that it feels like the strongest advocacy and the most outraged response is to defend a pharmaceutical company,” said Jennifer Manly, a professor of neuropsychology in neurology at Columbia University. “It feels like a betrayal,” she added.

“It sounds a little performative and I don’t hear any action behind the real issues of inequity in Alzheimer’s management,” said Sharon Brangman, distinguished service professor of geriatrics medicine at SUNY Upstate Medical University, who noted she was not criticizing any one advocacy organization. “I really am past the point with all the performative clamoring about equity.”

People on both sides of the debate think the other side is missing the bigger picture.

Those up in arms about Medicare’s proposal insist the decision sets such a broad precedent that it’s really not about accessing Aduhelm at all. They insist the decision would set a precedent that would allow Medicare to make patients chose between enrolling in a clinical trial, paying out of pocket for the drug, or foregoing the drug altogether, despite those drugs already being FDA approved and typically covered by Medicare.

“We think this is bigger,” said Harry Johns, CEO of the Alzheimer’s Association. “We think it would be an error — a grand error — to let this go.”

Johns also noted his organization has multiple initiatives aimed at addressing systemic inequities in Alzheimer’s disease.

Meanwhile, others say groups need to focus on bigger issues, like addressing lack of primary care doctors in urban and rural areas who can identify suspected risk factors for Alzheimer’s disease like uncontrolled high blood pressure and diabetes, or making sure people of color are included in clinical trials.

“It’s kind of like saying everyone should have a Rolls Royce when we don’t even have people in Kias yet,” said Brangman. “We have to go back to the basics.”

Several researchers noted that there’s hardly any data testing Aduhelm in communities of color. Nearly 80% of the participants in Biogen’s Phase 3 trials were white.

“If this trial didn’t even have communities of color, then the findings aren’t even generalizable to us,” said Joyce Balls-Berry, an associate professor of neurology at Washington University School of Medicine.

Researchers like Columbia’s Manly have raised concerns that Biogen’s Phase 3 trial may have underreported risks of adverse events like microhemorrhages because the trial did not include more Black participants, who experience a higher rate of certain risk factors associated with those adverse events, like vascular disease. They admitted, however, those concerns are hypothetical, given the lack of data.

It’s not the first time researchers have butted heads with Alzheimer’s advocacy groups, especially the Alzheimer’s Association.

A heated debate erupted in 2017 after the Alzheimer’s Association worked to develop a new definition of Alzheimer’s disease alongside the National Institute on Aging. They defined the condition based on confirmed presence of certain biomarkers, like plaques in the brain, rather than symptoms like memory or thinking changes.

Health equity researchers argued the definition negatively impacted communities of color who didn’t have access to the technology needed to diagnose the disease that way, and made it harder for researchers studying these populations to get research funding, explained Jackson, the MGH researcher.

“There was a very impassioned debate … that cautioned against this change,” said Jackson. “Health equity was not well served by that pivot.”

The question now is who officials at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services will listen to.

Alzheimer’s advocacy organizations, many of which have received funding from major drug makers like Biogen, have already pledged to ratchet up the pressure on Medicare to walk back its decision before it’s finalized in April. They’re also not the only groups slamming Medicare. Biogen said in a statement that the decision would “significantly limit patient access to an FDA-approved treatment, especially for underserved patients.”

The entire controversy poses a unique challenge for President Biden, and especially CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, both of whom have publicly pledged to help tackle the issue of health disparities.

“It’s just hard to believe that this president and the people who work in his administration would accept such an approach that would so negatively affect so many people in so many ways,” said Johns of the Alzheimer’s Association, who pledged the group would be “relentless” in pushing Medicare to reverse its decision.

But Medicare officials were aware of advocates’ concerns before issuing Tuesday’s draft decision, and did so anyway. Several organizations, including the Alliance for Aging Research and National Minority Quality Forum, had raised the issue long before this week’s proposal.

Medicare officials defended the proposal in a press call Tuesday evening, pointing out that they are requiring trials to be “representative of the national population” diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, meaning they must enroll a sizable portion of Black and Hispanic patients.

“Given the disappointing lack of inclusion of underserved populations in past trials, we are requiring a representative patient population in this trial,” said Tamara Syrek Jensen, the director of its coverage and analysis group at CMS. “We think this is important for this disease.”

https://www.statnews.com/2022/01/13/medicare-aduhelm-proposal-debate-equity-alzheimers-treatment/

At Davos, a ‘good news, bad news’ message emerges about Covid-19

 As the coronavirus continues to wreak havoc, an expert panel at the World Economic Forum delivered a mix of good news and bad news on Monday: More variants will emerge, but vaccine production is accelerating and research is progressing toward a combined shot that may be able to attack these different variants.

On one hand, the world needs to prepare for newer strains that could be more vexing, or the “worst case scenario,” said Annelies Wilder-Smith, a professor of emerging infectious diseases at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. “Omicron will not be the last variant. There’s a high probability we will have another variant coming up. The question is when and will it be less dangerous?”

Her sobering reminder was made as part of a discussion about the path the coronavirus is taking and the outlook for its transition from pandemic to an endemic threat. For that to happen, the world has to take control in ways that still are not happening, which makes it difficult to predict that such a transformation can occur this year, according to Anthony Fauci, chief medical adviser to President Biden.

“We don’t know, and we have to be openly honest about that,” he said. At this stage, the near-term goal is to control the virus to the point where it is not disrupting society. But the current outlook depends on whether still another variant emerges that eludes the immune response to the Omicron variant. As a result, this remains “an open question.”

Tempering the uncertainty was a strain of optimism over vaccines. Moderna (MRNA) chief executive officer Stéphane Bancel noted that production is ramping up to meet global demand and that his company expects to makes two to three billion doses this year. He added that work is also under way to make a single, annual booster shot for the future and an answer may be known by the fall.

Meanwhile, though, the panelists acknowledged the inability to better address vaccine inequity, or whether vaccine supplies are sufficiently available across the globe. As the pandemic emerged two years ago, many wealthy nations raced to secure vaccines, leaving poor and middle income countries behind.

Public health experts and patient advocates have warned, however, this type of horserace only prolongs and worsens the pandemic because it allows new — and possibly, more dangerous – variants to emerge. And as such a scenario plays out, the number of infections and subsequent deaths continues to increase — making it harder to recover global health and the global economy.

But some panel members maintained progress is being made as an increasing number of doses are being delivered to lower-income countries. Richard Hatchett, who heads the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, noted that a World Health Organization donation program called COVAX has delivered 1 billion doses to mostly poor countries, as of this past weekend.

This is “an important milestone,” he said. But Hatchett, whose nonprofit works with the WHO in managing the COVAX program, also indicated that he does not think a proposal before the World Trade Organization to temporarily waive intellectual property rights for Covid-19 medical products is a key answer to greater production or distribution.

In theory, such a waiver could make it easier for countries that permit compulsory licensing to allow a domestic manufacturer to export vaccines. But many wealthy nations, including several that are home to some of the world’s biggest drug makers, have objected to the idea, although the Biden administration last spring agreed to support the effort.

The “waiver may have a role in that, but there are other paths to pursue too, and we really need to explore all of them,” said Hatchett. “I don’t think it’s necessary right now in terms of making vaccines available. I think it’s the last option.”

Instead, Hatchett maintained a key issue right now is what he called “the last mile,” a reference to ensuring that vaccines sent to low and lower-middle-income countries find their way into arms. Beyond sufficient supplies, there are concerns that many countries lack logistical and medical resources to vaccinate their citizens.

Bancel indicated that, on any given day, his company has 50 million to 100 million doses waiting to be shipped to COVAX and argued that wealthy nations should be doing more to ensure supplies are made available. For his part, Fauci noted the Biden administration has increased its donation program to poorer countries.

https://www.statnews.com/pharmalot/2022/01/17/at-davos-a-good-news-bad-news-message-emerges-about-covid-19/

No one has any idea how much money seniors could pay for new Alzheimer’s drug

 Medicare has outlined how it plans to cover the controversial, pricey new Alzheimer’s treatment Aduhelm, but the plan is missing a crucial detail: how much money Medicare patients who receive the drug would actually pay.

The draft coverage policy, announced Tuesday, would severely restrict the number of seniors who can access the drug at all, as Medicare plans to only cover the drug for patients participating in rigorous, agency-approved clinical trials. But Medicare remained mum on the potential cost of the drug for patients enrolled in the clinical trials.

Normally, patients do not pay to participate in clinical trials, as trial sponsors pay the cost of medication and related services. But these wouldn’t be normal clinical trials.

Thorny issues remain that likely won’t be resolved for months, and “now taxpayers are involved in financing the trials instead of the drugmakers themselves,” said Sean Dickson, director of health policy at the West Health Policy Center.

The cost of the treatment could also be relevant to trial sponsors’ ability to recruit clinical trial participants, as Medicare is also requiring an unprecedented level of diversity in trials to better reflect the Alzheimer’s patient population. Black and Hispanic people are significantly more likely to develop Alzheimer’s, but are more often left out of clinical trials.

Under Medicare, seniors usually pay 20% of the price of a drug administered in a physician’s office  — though most seniors have additional insurance to help them cover that cost. Biogen, the company that makes Aduhelm, slashed the drug’s price from $56,000 to $28,200 per year in December.

Medicare officials provided little detail about potential clinical trial designs and didn’t mention anything in the draft policy about whether patients would be required to pay to participate in the trials, or whether patients would have to be kept in the dark about whether they were receiving treatment.

The gold standard for randomized controlled trials requires that both patients and providers are unaware of whether they are providing or receiving the drug or a placebo.

That begs the question: Is there a possibility that patients would be receiving a placebo and still paying for it?

In this highly unusual case, Medicare has more flexibility than usual to change how patients pay for drugs because Congress allows Medicare to adjust payments if it’s necessary to preserve the validity of clinical trials.

Normally, it would be illegal for drug makers to directly help Medicare patients pay their out-of-pocket costs. This provision could allow for some flexibility when sponsors submit clinical trial designs after a final coverage decision, which is expected by April 11.

“That’s a solvable problem… I don’t think that’s the major stumbling block,” said Joseph Ross, a professor of public health and medicine at Yale University and an expert in Food and Drug Administration regulatory science.

The idea that any patients would be receiving a placebo at all when an FDA-approved treatment is available is riling Biogen and the Alzheimer’s Association. The scientific community considers it unethical in many cases for patients to get a placebo after a treatment has demonstrated a benefit.

“We believe that the idea that someone would get a placebo in a trial, that would be a duplication of the FDA’s role, and would be, again, flatly wrong,” said Alzheimer’s Association CEO Harry Johns. “It’s hardly imaginable as something, again, that this administration in particular would pursue.”

Biogen also called the possibility that some patients could receive placebos “particularly concerning.”

Despite its complaints, however, Biogen is also setting up a confirmatory trial — one that was required by the FDA to prove whether the drug actually helps slow patients’ cognitive decline — that will be placebo-controlled.

Steven Joffe, the interim chair of the department of medical ethics & health policy at the University of Pennsylvania, said it’s perfectly ethical to run a placebo-controlled trial because Aduhelm is not proven to have clinical benefits for patients.

“This is a first-in-class approval, and it would be no ethical problem to conduct a randomized trial with a placebo-controlled arm,” Joffe said.

The argument that it would be unethical to withhold an FDA-approved medication from a patient didn’t sway Ross either, who said the line of argument is “a misuse of the field of ethics.”

Medicare may choose to approve clinical trials that compare treatment on the drug to the standard of care, though there aren’t alternative disease-altering therapies available for Alzheimer’s disease, said Sean Tunis, a principal at Rubix Health who helped develop the Coverage with Evidence Development process during his tenure at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. In that case, it would be possible trial participants would know whether they were receiving Aduhelm.

Tamara Syrek Jensen, director of the Coverage and Analysis Group at CMS, told stakeholders on Thursday that there may be trials that meet the criteria for approval that are not double-blinded and placebo-controlled.

Medicare will issue guidance surrounding payment rates, including required beneficiary cost-sharing, upon the publication of the final coverage decision, a CMS spokesperson said. The agency is accepting public comments on the draft proposal for 30 days.

“The mechanics of this is going to be one of the most fascinating aspects of this whole situation,” Joffe said.

https://www.statnews.com/2022/01/14/no-one-has-any-idea-how-much-money-seniors-could-pay-for-new-alzheimers-drug/