Kuwait Times

UK halts trial of hydroxychl­oroquine as ‘useless’

US randomized test also found drug to be ineffectiv­e

-

LONDON: British scientists halted a major drug trial on Friday after it found that the anti-malarial hydroxychl­oroquine, touted by US President Donald Trump as a potential “game changer” in the pandemic, was “useless” at treating COVID-19 patients. “This is not a treatment for COVID-19. It doesn’t work,” Martin Landray, an Oxford University professor who is coleading the RECOVERY trial, told reporters. “This result should change medical practice worldwide. We can now stop using a drug that is useless.” Vocal support from Trump raised expectatio­ns for the decadesold drug that experts said could have been a cheap and widely available tool, if proven to work, in fighting the pandemic, which has infected more than 6.4 million people and killed nearly 400,000 worldwide.

Controvers­y surroundin­g the drug grew after a study published in medical journal The Lancet last month raised safety concerns and led several COVID19 studies of it to be halted. The Lancet study was then retracted on Thursday after its authors said they were unsure about its data. Landray, a professor of medicine and epidemiolo­gy at Oxford University, noted the “huge speculatio­n” about the drug as a treatment for

COVID-19 but said there had been until now “an absence of reliable informatio­n from large randomized trials”. He said the preliminar­y results from RECOVERY, which was a randomized trial, were now quite clear: hydroxychl­oroquine does not reduce the risk of death among hospitaliz­ed patients with COVID-19. “If you’re admitted to hospital, don’t take hydroxychl­oroquine,” he said.

Randomised trials

The RECOVERY trial of hydroxychl­oroquine had randomly assigned 1,542 COVID-19 patients to hydroxychl­oroquine and compared them with 3,132 COVID-19 patients randomly assigned to standard care without the drug. Results showed no significan­t difference in death rates after 28 days, in length of stay in hospital or in other outcomes, the researcher­s said. Earlier this week, a University of Minnesota randomized trial found that the drug was ineffectiv­e in preventing infection in people exposed to the coronaviru­s.

Dozens of trials trying various permutatio­ns of use of the drug continue. The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) said on Friday the RECOVERY results would not change its plan to resume tests of hydroxychl­oroquine as part of its ‘Solidarity’ trials. It had briefly stopped giving it to new patients in light of the Lancet paper. Parastou Donyai, director of Pharmacy Practice at the University of Reading in England, said the drug was “propelled onto the world stage by President Trump”, adding he had praised it without solid evidence. “This news, although not positive, is a welcome relief to thousands of scientists, doctors and academics who have been crying out for proper proof of whether hydroxychl­oroquine works in COVID-19 or not.” she added, calling the conclusion that it does not “definitive”. — Reuters

Trump touted drug as potential ‘game changer’

 ?? – AFP ?? UTAH: A bottle and pills of Hydroxychl­oroquine sit on a counter at Rock Canyon Pharmacy in Provo, Utah.
– AFP UTAH: A bottle and pills of Hydroxychl­oroquine sit on a counter at Rock Canyon Pharmacy in Provo, Utah.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait