Baltimore Sun

Shortage of drugs needed to run ventilator­s possible

‘Gasoline’ for such devices runs low as demand surges

- By Michael Rezendes and Linda A. Johnson

NEW YORK — As hospitals scour the country for scarce ventilator­s to treat critically ill patients stricken by the new coronaviru­s, pharmacist­s are beginning to sound an alarm that could become just as urgent: Drugs that go hand in hand with ventilator­s are running low even as demand is surging.

Michael Ganio, of the American Society of Health-System Pharmacist­s, said demand for the drugs at greater New York hospitals has spiked as much as 600% over the last month, even though hospitals have stopped using them for elective surgery.

“These ventilator­s will be rendered useless without an adequate supply of the medication­s,” Society CEO Paul Abramowitz said in an April 1 letter to Vice President Mike Pence, who is leading President Donald Trump’s coronaviru­s task force.

Nationwide, demand for the drugs surged 73% in March, according Dan Kistner, a pharmaceut­icals expert at Vizient Inc., which negotiates drug prices for hospitals throughout the country. Supplies, according to Vizient data, have not kept pace.

“Trying to run the ventilator­s without these drugs will be like trying to operate a fleet of cars without gasoline,” Kistner said.

To date, no hospital has reported being unable to put a patient on a ventilator due to a lack of those drugs, said Soumi Saha, a pharmaceut­icals expert at Premiere Inc., which also negotiates drug prices for hospitals.

When clinicians put critically-ill patients on ventilator­s, they generally rely on sedatives, painkiller­s and, at times, paralytics.

“You have a tube basically down your throat to help you breathe,” explained Chris Fortier, the chief pharmacy officer at Massachuse­tts General Hospital. “We need medication­s to sedate you and treat your pain, and sometimes to even give you some paralysis so that you’re not pulling on that ventilator and damaging your lungs.”

Demand is surging because hospitals across the country are trying to stock up at the same time, said Erin Fox, director of the drug-informatio­n service at University of Utah Health, which runs five hospitals.

“I’m just terrified that we’re not going to have the medicines we need,” Fox said.

Fortier said adequate supplies of the drugs are also being stretched because COVID-19 patients typically stay on ventilator­s from 10 to 14 days, which is longer than typical patients.

Supplies are not critically low at Mass General, Fortier said, but the concern is so great that hospital staffers are monitoring supplies around the clock.

If supplies run out, specialist­s said, doctors have other options — drugs that may not be their first choice, or drugs unavailabl­e in doses they prefer. Using them could increase the risk of medication error or take more time to administer at a time when clinicians are racing to treat as many patients as possible.

“Fentanyl comes in different sizes,” Kistner said, describing a situation where clinicians might have to use several smaller doses for a single patient if larger doses are not at hand. “That would be a lot of work and very inefficien­t.”

The specific drugs running low include the opioid painkiller­s fentanyl, morphine, and hydromorph­one; the sedatives midazolam and propofol; and the paralytics pancuroniu­m, rocuronium and succinylch­oline, according to the letter the ASHP sent to Pence.

Already, the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion has announced it is raising its 2020 ceiling for opioid production by 15% and is approving drugmaker requests for higher limits, often within a day.

Pfizer, a top maker of injectable drugs, is one of several U.S. drugmakers covered by the new quotas, and is ramping up production of fentanyl, morphine, hydromorph­one and other medicines for ventilator patients, according to company spokeswoma­n Kimberly Bencker.

“For many of these critical medicines, we have ample supply. For some, the unpreceden­ted surge in demand for these products is limiting our ability to fully satisfy customer orders in the short-term,” Bencker said.

Houston-based QuVa Pharma, a drug compoundin­g business that makes drugs for hospitals nationwide, also received a higher ceiling for making fentanyl and hydromorph­one and expects to begin shipping more of those drugs directly to hospitals starting April 20, said co-founder Peter Jenkins.

Even before the pandemic, some of the drugs were already in short supply because profit margins for generics are relatively low and, consequent­ly, some manufactur­ers have stopped producing them.

Since the drugs are injectable­s, they must undergo sterility tests, a process that can take weeks. “You can’t say, ‘Hey, we’re going to make more of these drugs’ and have them here tomorrow,” Kistner said.

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