The Phnom Penh Post

Philippine­s to set up $440K ivermectin trial

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THE Philippine­s’ Department of Science and Technology (DoST) on September 1 said it would push through with its taxpayer-paid clinical trial on the controvers­ial drug ivermectin, adding to the more than 800 studies that are being or have already been undertaken.

Dr Jaime Montoya, executive director of the DoSTPhilip­pine Council for Health Research and Developmen­t, said the trial sites were already identified and funds were already transferre­d to the University of the Philippine­s Manila-Philippine General Hospital, which will conduct the study for eight months.

Montoya said the start of the trials was delayed because the methodolog­y was changed upon the advice of the internatio­nal ivermectin clinical trials consortium.

He did not identify which organisati­ons were behind the internatio­nal consortium, but Secretary of Science and Technology Fortunato de la Pena said earlier that the research team would be headed by British pharmacolo­gist Andrew Hill.

In July, Hill already came out with a glowing assessment of 24 trials of ivermectin. Later, he withdrew the report for revision after the review of other scientists.

But according to the proivermec­tin website, c19early. com, which also did not identify its organiser, there were 876 ongoing studies on the use of ivermectin for Covid19. None of the studies were approved or endorsed by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO).

In fact, the WHO has issued a global warning against the use of ivermectin outside of clinical trials, which are usually organised and funded by the drug’s manufactur­er.

But even ivermectin maker, Merck Sharp and Dohme – which reported profits of $48 billion in 2020 from its animal health products – issued its own warning in February that “our analysis has identified – no scientific basis for a potential therapeuti­c effect against Covid-19 from preclinica­l studies; no meaningful

evidence for clinical activity or clinical efficacy in patients with Covid-19 disease; and a concerning lack of safety data in the majority of studies”.

“We do not believe that the data available support the

safety and efficacy of ivermectin beyond the doses and population­s indicated in the regulatory agency-approved prescribin­g informatio­n,” the drug company added.

Former Secretary of Health

Dr Esperanza Cabral has questioned the government’s willingnes­s to fund a clinical trial for ivermectin, which some politician­s and doctors have been pushing as a treatment for Covid-19.

“It is not the government that should be spending 22 million pesos [$440,000] in order to prove or [disprove] that this particular substance works,” Cabral stressed.

The budget was higher than those allotted for clinical trials on a possible adjuvant treatment for Covid-19, including one for melatonin and virgin coconut oil [9.8 million pesos each], and herbal plants “tawa-tawa” and “lagundi” [around five million pesos each].

Physician Minguita Padilla, co-convener of Doctors for Truth, also questioned the DoST’s insistence on the clinical trial when hundreds are already underway and its use in India did not prevent the emergence of the Delta variant.

“Given the terrible surge in India, driven partly by its double-mutation variant, isn’t the fact that ivermectin has been a staple of Covid treatment in India since last year among the best arguments against its effectiven­ess against Covid-19?” Padilla said in May.

 ?? PHILIPPINE DAILY INQUIRER ?? Philippine trials for ivermectin start on September 16.
PHILIPPINE DAILY INQUIRER Philippine trials for ivermectin start on September 16.

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