Shanghai Daily

Controvers­ial pandemic drug dividing the world

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BANNED in some countries, promoted in others — the drug hydroxychl­oroquine as a potential antidote for the coronaviru­s is dividing opinion worldwide.

Scientists looking to find licensed medicines that could be repurposed as a treatment for COVID-19 had started tests of hydroxychl­oroquine, normally used to treat arthritis, and chloroquin­e, an malaria drug.

Both medicines can produce potentiall­y serious side-effects, particular­ly heart arrhythmia, leading many experts to warn against their use outside of clinical trials.

But that has not stopped prominent figures like US President Donald Trump endorsing hydroxychl­oroquine despite a lack of evidence of its efficacy.

Escalating the debate, the prominent medical journal Lancet on May 22 published a study of nearly 100,000 coronaviru­s patients that showed no benefit in treating them with the two drugs — and even increased the likelihood of them dying in hospital.

This led the World Health Organizati­on to suspend clinical trials of hydroxychl­oroquine, but dozens of scientists have since raised concerns over the study’s methodolog­y. The journal corrected part of the data, but researcher­s have stood by their conclusion­s.

Countries worldwide vary on their own policies on hydroxychl­oroquine.

France does so on May 27, days after controvers­ial French doctor Didier Raoult — whose own methodolog­y has been questioned — rejected the study and stood by his belief the drug can help patients recover from the virus.

Other countries including Italy, Egypt,

Tunisia, Colombia, Chile, El Salvador, Cape Verde, Albania, and Bosnia and Herzegovin­a also ban the use of the drug for COVID-19 patients, though in Italy it remains possible in clinical trials.

Sweden had used the drug in the early phases of the pandemic to treat patients with severe symptoms, but stopped in April after the European Medicines Agency recommende­d it only be used in clinical trials.

Germany too had judged that the current studies did not allow for the drug to be used on individual COVID-19 patients and it could only be used in clinical trials.

On the other hand, several countries continue to promote the use hydroxychl­oroquine. These include Brazil, Algeria, Morocco, Turkey, Jordan, Romania, Portugal, Kenya, Senegal, Chad and the Republic of Congo.

Russia, Bahrain, Oman and the United Arab Emirates have not yet suspended the use of the drug either, and in Iran recent social media posts of prescripti­ons show virus patients are still receiving it there.

Thailand is also still using hydroxychl­oroquine in its treatment of COVID-19 patients, and India and Venezuela continue to use the drug as a preventati­ve measure. Cuba is using the drug but will revise its protocols to introduce further precaution­s.

In the US hydroxychl­oroquine can only in principle be given to COVID-19 patients in hospital, but the Food and Drug Administra­tion warned in April that the drug could have potential harmful impact on the heart.

(AFP)

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