Bangkok Post

Medicine shortage looms across Europe

Drug stocks at critical levels, EMA warns

-

AMSTERDAM: While the world waits for a coronaviru­s vaccine, medicines used to deal with the symptoms of the disease are increasing­ly in critically short supply in Europe, the worsthit continent.

From sedatives needed to intubate patients struggling to breathe to antimalari­al drugs heavily backed by US President Donald Trump, the Covid-19 pandemic is eating up stocks.

The European Medicines Agency said that the “continued availabili­ty of medicines, in particular those used for patients with Covid-19, is of critical concern for EMA”.

“Some EU member states have indicated that they are starting to see shortages of certain medicines used for patients with Covid-19 or are expecting such shortages to occur very soon,” the Amsterdam-based regulator said.

Europe is the continent most-heavily affected by the disease, with more than 50,000 deaths so far, and the strain is showing on hospitals dealing with a wave of patients suffering from coronaviru­s.

Nine major European hospitals launched an appeal for help at the end of March, asking for internatio­nal cooperatio­n to guarantee a steady supply of medicines for the disease.

They warned in particular of a shortage of vital drugs for the resuscitat­ion of patients including muscle relaxants, sedatives and painkiller­s, which are being used up rapidly with “insufficie­nt or non-existent” restocking because of the pandemic.

The situation led the EMA to take urgent measures under which each pharmaceut­ical company must report directly to the agency to speed up communicat­ions between the industry and the EU on shortages.

The EMA said an existing committee on medicine shortages caused by major events, which includes the European Commission and relevant authoritie­s in each EU country, would also look at how to guarantee supplies.

In France, Prime Minister Edouard Philippe admitted there was “very strong tensions” over certain medicines needed in intensive care units because of an “unheard of” demand.

The same is true in Spain, where the national regulator said there were “oneoff tensions” over the supply of certain medicines used in intensive care, especially sedatives for intubation.

To deal with the problems health agencies have in some cases allowed medicines to be used outside their normal usage, for example, veterinary medicines which use the same active substance as drugs for humans.

In an online guide for doctors dealing with shortages, the Spanish associatio­n of intensive care medics said it was having to “consider the prescripti­on of sedatives that are not normally used”.

French officials said they were in contact with laboratori­es to ensure rapid restocking of scarce medicines, while

Spanish labs had boosted production.

The rush for highly publicised but still experiment­al treatments for Covid19 has also caused problems for patients who use the drugs for other illnesses.

The anti-malarial drugs chloroquin­e and hydroxychl­oroquine should only be used to treat Covid-19 in clinical trials or in case of “national emergency”, the EMA warned last week.

The medicines have shown early promise against Covid-19 in early studies in France and China.

Doctors in Italy, the country hardesthit by the virus, also warned last week that limited stocks of the two drugs could wreck plans for clinical trials. Similar concerns have been raised about a combinatio­n of HIV drugs lopinavir and ritonavir.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Doctors wheel a patient to a TGV high-speed train equipped with intensive care units at Paris’ Gare d’Austerlitz yesterday.
BLOOMBERG Doctors wheel a patient to a TGV high-speed train equipped with intensive care units at Paris’ Gare d’Austerlitz yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand