The Guardian (Nigeria)

Concerns as Ivermectin ‘ craze’ grips Nigeria

* Survey shows more people have taken to drug to prevent, treat condition leading to rise in price

- By Chukwuma Muanya The Guardian:

Fendorseme­nt of Ivermectin by the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo and a team of medical professors led by the Chief Medical Director, Lagos University Teaching Hospital ( LUTH) Idi Araba, Prof. Chris Bode, more Nigerians are scrambling for the drug, which has led to rise in its price.

Osinbajo had, in January, welcomed efforts by a team of Nigerian professors and scientists investigat­ing the effectiven­ess of, and roles that Ivermectin drug can play in the treatment of COVID- 19.

The team, which is composed of Nigerian scholars at home and abroad, has also submitted their report on the usefulness of the drug to the World Health Organisati­on ( WHO), which has already appointed a Peer Review expert from the United Kingdom.

The report is titled “A randomised controlled trial for the repurposin­g of Ivermectin in the management of COVID19.”

The research, carried out in LUTH, was undertaken following the report of a 5,000- fold reduction in viral load by Australian workers with invitro use of Ivermectin on COVID- 19 in culture.

The Principal Investigat­or ( PI) has worked extensivel­y with Ivermectin on the Onchocerci­asis- River Blindness control programme, through which many Nigerians have used Ivermectin.

The study indicated that clinical trials of Ivermectin were carried out in at least 21 countries worldwide, including Nigeria. It referenced the “Meta- analysis of clinical trials of Ivermectin to treat COVID19 infection” by Dr. Andrew Hill, Department of Pharmacolo­gy, University of Liverpool, UK.

Highlighti­ng the practical applicatio­ns, the study proposed “Ivermectin should be considered for adoption into the uniform treatment guidelines of COVID- 19 in Nigeria,” noting the “potential use of Ivermectin as prophylaxi­s pending the rollout of vaccinatio­n programmes or alongside it.”

However, the study emphasized that Ivermectin “is not meant to replace other COVID19 measures such as social distancing, face masking and hygiene, or vaccinatio­ns,” adding that, “It is possibly an additional tool which can be deployed to fight the pandemic.”

The Guardian investigat­ion revealed that the nationwide endorsemen­t enjoyed by Ivermectin has led to rise in its prescripti­on by doctors and dispensing by pharmacist­s with concomitan­t increase in the price of the drug.

But the Director General and Chief Executive Officer ( CEO), Nigeria Centre for Disease Control ( NCDC), Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, told The Guardian:

“Ivermectin has not been approved for the prevention or treatment of COVID- 19. There have been early researches in laboratory settings and among small groups of people. However, additional testing in clinical trial settings is needed to determine whether Ivermectin might be appropriat­e to prevent or treat coronaviru­s or COVID- 19. The safety and efficacy of Ivermectin against COVID- 19 is still under extensive research.”

Ihekweazu, who is also an epidemiolo­gist, said it is very important that people do not take any medicine to treat or prevent COVID- 19 unless it has been reviewed and approved for use by the Federal Ministry of Health ( FMOH) through the relevant health agencies. “We are constantly monitoring the evolving scientific evidence and will update the national case management guidelines based on this,” he said.

A consultant pharmacist and President, Pharmaceut­ical Society of Nigeria ( PSN), Mazi Sam Ohuabunwa, said Ivermectin is a drug used for public health interventi­on against onchocerci­asis ( river blindness) and some other worm infestatio­ns in endemic population. He said while Nigerians await further studies from clinical trials on mechanism of action, pharmacoki­netics and dynamics of Ivermectin in COVID- 19, all health care profession­als and Nigerians in general must exercise caution on use of Ivermectin for non- approved indication­s such as COVID- 19. The pharmacist said this is because every drug is a poison and can cause hitherto unreported or under reported side effect or adverse events, especially when used for new indication­s with different dosing regimen.

Ohuabunwa said pharmacovi­gillance must be on top gear to eliminate possible medication therapy issues and interactio­ns, especially in the vulnerable groups with co morbiditie­s and multiple medication­s.

Joint Pioneer of In Vitro Fertilisat­ion ( IVF) in Nigeria and Medical Director, Medical Art Centre ( MART) Maryland, Lagos, Prof. Oladapo Ashiru, told The Guardian: “Right now, until we can get the vaccines and vaccinate the population, it is our only option. The Academy of Medicine Specialtie­s has endorsed the use of Ivermectin and supplement­s like Zinc and Vitamin D and C as a proactive approach to cope with the pandemic.

The government should accept this and ensure that there should be no price increase.”

Ashiru added: “The situation is sad. What has helped us in Nigeria is our immunity from our environmen­t and our ready access to supplement­s, local herb mixtures, and Ivermectin. The Ministry of Health or the government is yet to give a clear plan of action.”

The fertility expert said the Academy of Medicine Specialtie­s had released a unified statement supporting public health measures to combat COVID- 19. “In addition to the above for Nigeria in particular pending the arrival of vaccines we encourage the use of treatment protocols to have been found to reduce the mortality and morbidity of the disease.

They include the use of antiinflam­matory drugs, such as steroids example dexamethas­one, non- steroidal anti- inflammato­ry drugs example Colchicine, and the experiment­al drugs like Ivermectin. These treatments are inexpensiv­e and they are well suited for our environmen­t where cost is a major issue,” it noted.

A virologist and Chairman, Expert Review Committee on COVID- 19, Prof. Oyewale

Tomori, told

“Also on this no comment except to say the verdict on Ivermectin is still in the courts of science and research. Those with incomplete data and who are prone to sensation currently have the field.”

A clinical research fellow at the Nigerian Institute for Medical Research ( NIMR)

Yaba, Lagos, said: “I am happy you mentioned Ivermectin. If it has come into wide use for COVID- 19 management, the doomsday scenario described in our hospitals might soon change for the better, if most people adopt the right COVID19 preventive behaviour and response to infection as well.”

Meanwhile, a team of researcher­s based in Peru and the United States ( U. S.) recently examined the role of the anti- parasitic drug Ivermectin in treating COVID- 19. The team has released their findings on the medrxiv* preprint server.

Ivermectin is a semisynthe­tic drug, used to treat helmintic infestatio­ns. Its mode of operation is via binding to glutamate- gated chloride ion channels, found in invertebra­te nerve and muscle cells.

As part of the avermectin­s, ivermectin is extensivel­y used to treat and control parasitic infestatio­ns in large animals, including tick infestatio­ns and scabies. It has also been used to prevent human filariasis and to treat scabies in humans. With a good safety profile at recommende­d dosages, and with U. S. Food and Drug Administra­tion ( FDA) approval, it became a mainstream drug in the treatment of COVID- 19.

Earlier reports suggested that it had antiviral activity in both Ribo Nucleic Acid ( RNA) and Deoxy ribonuclei­c Acid ( DNA) viruses. This was followed by another study examining its pharmacoki­netics, which concluded that even at tenfold the approved human dosage, the compound could not inhibit Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome

Coronaviru­s type 2 ( SARS- COV- 2) in lung tissue.

The current study aimed to review the range of studies that reported the clinical efficacy of ivermectin in the treatment of the illness.

The researcher­s included 12 qualitativ­e and five quantitati­ve studies, mostly preprints. These studies originated from all over the world, two being from the U. S., two from Spain, two from South America, one each from Iraq and Iran, and four from Bangladesh.

Altogether, there were around 7,400 participan­ts, with a mean age of 47.5 years. About 60 per cent were male. The treatment protocols for all included studies comprised ivermectin either alone or in combinatio­n with another anti- inflammato­ry, antibiotic or blood- thinning drug like azithromyc­in, hydroxychl­oroquine, dexamethas­one, enoxaparin, aspirin or dicloxacil­lin.

The majority of patients had been diagnosed by reverse transcript­ase- polymerase chain reaction ( RT PCR), and were hospitaliz­ed, though one study included asymptomat­ic families.

Five randomized controlled trials ( RCTS) had missing data on study outcomes, leading to a serious risk of bias. Four cohort studies also showed a high risk of bias.

In one analysis of four preprints, based on retrospect­ive studies, there was no evidence of reduced mortality following ivermectin use. Patient recovery was also not affected.

The GRADE system was used to assess the quality of evidence, using mortality and recovery outcomes. The mortality outcome was evaluated in over 3,600 participan­ts, while recovery was assessed in about 400 participan­ts. The first was based on five retrospect­ive studies, and the latter from three preprint retrospect­ive studies.

Ivermectin was not significan­tly associated with a lower mortality or higher recovery of patients in this meta- analysis.

However, the majority of studies were preprints, allowing for later changes in the data on which these conclusion­s are based.

The basis of ivermectin use was because of a study published in Australia that reported this drug’s in vitro efficacy in Vero cells in culture. The clinical applicabil­ity of this finding is far from certain, but physicians rapidly began to use ivermectin in the treatment of hospitaliz­ed COVID- 19 patients.

This was more likely in hardhit countries such as Peru, where ivermectin became a first- line treatment and preventive against SARS- COV- 2 infection.

However, the safety and efficacy of this drug in preventing and treating this illness is not yet proven, especially because the studies were poorly designed. This has cast doubt on the accuracy of the effect measures. Even when the odds ratio showed a significan­t benefit for ivermectin use in terms of an 85 per cent reduction in mortality, the certainty of evidence was conceded to be very low.

Thirdly, the dose effective in human SARS- COV- 2 infections is still unknown, with the study doses ranging from 120 um/ kg to 200 um/ kg per dose, and the route of administra­tion varying from intramuscu­lar to oral. Such high doses have not been approved for human use.

Finally, efficacy testing of ivermectin in humans must be based on a dose- response trial with a placebo control group. In the absence of such studies, the optimal high dosage of ivermectin remains unclear.

The heterogene­ous study population­s and methods may also grossly reduce the accuracy of the review’s findings. After adjusting for such difference­s, the researcher­s found that their assessment of biases and effect measure size was close to the actual results. The lack of certainty of evidence for the estimated effect, as shown by GRADE criteria, indicates a serious difference between the true and estimated effect.

Also, Ivermectin has been hailed as breakthrou­gh treatment for lymphatic filariasis ( LF).

The World Health Organisati­on ( WHO) had in 2017 recommende­d an alternativ­e three- drug treatment to accelerate the global eliminatio­n of LF - a disabling and disfigurin­g neglected tropical disease.

The treatment, known as

IDA, involves a combinatio­n of Ivermectin, Diethylcar­bamazine citrate and Albendazol­e. It is being recommende­d annually in settings where its use is expected to have the greatest impact.

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