Tocilizumab, plasma, Ivermectin no longer part of clinical mgmt
Tocilizumab, Ivermectin and plasma therapy no longer find a place in the recommended treatment of COVID cases as per the new clinical case management protocol in Tamil Nadu, even as private hospitals insist on patients’ kin purchasing a few of these drugs. The requirement for these has also been flooding WhatsApp groups of late.
According to health experts, the recommendation of Tocilizumab for severely ill COVID patients is not part of the clinical management protocols for COVID-19 patients. Moreover, a study by the New England Journal of Medicine revealed Tocilizumab was not effective in preventing intubation or death in moderately ill hospitalised patients. ‘Some benefit or harm cannot be ruled out, however, because the confidence intervals for efficacy comparisons were wide,’ the study concluded.
Owing to low research evidence on the effectiveness of Ivermectin in the case of COVID patients, the drug was recently ruled out. The World Health Organisation had stated that the current evidence on the use of Ivermectin to treat COVID patients is inconclusive. The expert committee members of WHO also objected to the use of the anti-parasitic drug for such patients.The new guidelines also rule out plasma therapy as the PLACID trial done to find the effectiveness of plasma in the treatment of COVID did not show any benefits in the patients but, in turn, was harmful in certain cases.
As per ICMR guidelines, plasma was not associated with reduction in mortality or progression to severe COVID-19. The trial failed to find benefits of the plasma therapy and was thus not recommended for corona patients. However, SOS calls and messages for the requirement
Director of Public Health and Preventive Medicine Dr TS Selvavinayagam said drugs recommended as part of the protocol are being followed in govt hospitals and pvt hospitals should also adhere to them
of plasma continue to circulate upon recommendation of doctors in private hospitals.
The Director of Public Health and Preventive Medicine Dr TS Selvavinayagam said that the drugs recommended as part of the protocol are being followed in government hospitals and private hospitals should also adhere to them. “However, particular cases that require specialised treatment due to other medical conditions are exceptional,” he said.