Houston Chronicle

Doctors trying pressurize­d oxygen chambers

- By Margie Mason and Robin McDowell

As a New York University medical researcher who works once a week in an emergency room, Dr. David Lee had the luxury of time to think like a scientist while also treating coronaviru­s patients whose lungs kept giving out.

In every case, he saw the same thing: Their blood was starved of oxygen.

One day an idea hit him: Could hyperbaric oxygen therapy, best known for treating divers with the bends, help stave off the need for ventilator­s and perhaps reduce deaths?

Physiologi­cally it made sense to him, but he soon learned it also was complicate­d. The therapy, which involves delivering 100 percent oxygen straight to patients inside a pressurize­d chamber, often is met with skepticism by the wider medical community because fringe supporters long have touted it as a virtual cure-all without scientific evidence.

So much so that the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion wrote a consumer update a few years ago, explaining the therapy only is approved for 13 types of treatment, ranging from burns to deep wounds and carbon monoxide poisoning.

The agency warned patients not to be misled by claims on the internet that it works for conditions such as cancer or autism.

Still, with medical teams worldwide having little success at saving lives despite throwing everything they had at COVID patients — testing old drugs, trying new ones — Lee believed doctors should be more open to exploring different types of treatments.

He brought his theory to Dr. Scott Gorenstein, a colleague at NYU Winthrop Hospital on Long Island with a decade of experience in the field.

Though the treatment is noninvasiv­e, with a long history of safety, both men knew they faced major obstacles.

Chief among them: finding funding, and overcoming skepticism about the treatment fueled by hyperbaric spas as well as videos of celebritie­s like Justin Bieber and LeBron James using portable chambers.

“If we were to promote hyperbaric without a rigorous scientific trial, because of the fringe community that’s already doing that, the likelihood that it would be accepted by mainstream medical communitie­s is close to zero,” Gorenstein said.

Within two weeks, the doctors had approval from an NYU institutio­nal review board for a small, case-control trial that would allow them to compare COVID-19 patients treated with hyperbaric­s to a control group matched with similar characteri­stics, such as age, sex, health conditions and oxygen requiremen­ts, that didn’t get it.

Twenty hyperbaric patients, predominan­tly men age 30 to 79, received up to five 90-minute treatments during the monthlong study. Gorenstein said almost all experience­d relief of symptoms once sealed inside the clear tube, similar in shape to the old iron lungs once used to treat polio.

Some went from having unresponsi­ve “deer-in-the-headlights” dazes to being alert and engaged, while others reported being able to sleep afterward for the first time in days.

Eighteen of those patients recovered and were discharged within days or weeks.

Two people died, and the death of one of them halted the study and prompted a hospital safety assessment. It concluded hyperbaric treatment was not the cause, Lee said. The FDA also was asked to review the case, but he said there has not yet been a response.

The control group saw a significan­tly higher rate of intubation­s, deaths and long-term hospitaliz­ations. However, both Gorenstein and Lee stressed the trial, which will soon be published, was too small to draw any solid conclusion­s.

“What we’ve been able to do, I think, is demonstrat­e that this therapy deserves to be studied in a large way,” Gorenstein said, adding the next step would be to secure funding for a larger, randomized control trial at multiple centers.

One of the biggest risks in hyperbaric­s is transporti­ng patients to and from the chamber, given how sick they are and their absolute dependence on supplement­al oxygen. There also are questions about how the treatment might affect blood-clotting disorders or if too much oxygen could lead to toxicity and, possibly, seizures.

“My feeling about any kind of interventi­on, it’s really important that that be done through clinical trials. If such data existed, then perfect, it’s worth a try,” said Mitchell Levy, medical director of the intensive care unit at Rhode Island Hospital and a professor of medicine at Brown University.

“But we want to be really careful that we’re not just acting out of desperatio­n, giving things that may be harmful … or spending a lot of money on ineffectiv­e therapies. And that’s the challenge of entering this uncharted territory,” Levy said

The treatment was first given to a handful of COVID-19 patients in Wuhan, China, with promising results. A study in Sweden plans to recruit 200 participan­ts. Israel, France and Italy are among others trying it. It’s also being tested out at several U.S. hospitals, including at the Opelousas General Health System in Louisiana.

With a virus as mysterious and cunning as COVID, Lee said it’s essential to raise questions. But he added it’s just as important to keep an open mind.

“There’s a lot of people trying to find solutions,” he said, adding hyperbaric­s could just be one piece of a larger puzzle. “This is not going to be an end-all, be-all.”

 ?? Marcus Speyrer / Associated Press ?? Two COVID-19 patients are treated in hyperbaric chambers at a hospital in Opelousas, La. The therapy involves delivering 100 percent oxygen to patients inside a pressurize­d chamber.
Marcus Speyrer / Associated Press Two COVID-19 patients are treated in hyperbaric chambers at a hospital in Opelousas, La. The therapy involves delivering 100 percent oxygen to patients inside a pressurize­d chamber.

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