San Antonio Express-News

Doctors say Trump’s case appears serious

- By Todd Ackerman todd.ackerman@chron.com

HOUSTON — Doctors from Houston’s Texas Medical Center said Friday that President Donald Trump stands a good chance of recovering fromCOVID-19, but they added that his hospitaliz­ation and quick treatment with an experiment­al drug suggest his case is more serious than initially assumed.

Trump was taken by helicopter to Walter Reed Hospital in Bethesda, Md., hours after the White House called his symptoms mild and said he would “continue carrying out his duties without disruption while recovering.” He has fever and fatigue, two classic symptoms of the disease.

“That he’s hospitaliz­ed means his condition isn’t mild,” said Dr. Faisal Masud, medical director of critical care at Houston Methodist Hospital. “Given the toll fever and fatigue can take on an obese 74-year-old, his case will require high level of monitoring and care.”

The diagnosis of Trump, who flouted his own experts’ advice about the coronaviru­s, neverthele­ss shocked conservati­ves and liberals alike, partly because of the pandemic’s recent decline in many parts of the country, Houston and Texas among them.

It also showed the extraordin­ary speed at which things can go wrong if people don’t follow the recommende­d preventati­ve steps — the White House spread, along with Trump’s progressio­n from asymptomat­ic to mildly symptomati­c to requiring hospitaliz­ation in no more than a couple days.

“Here’s the lesson to be learned,” said Dr. James McDeavitt, dean of clinical affairs at Baylor College of Medicine. “The virus is still as active, virulent and infectious as ever. It’s also very democratic: it can impact

most powerful person in world and the most disadvanta­ged. If we don’t mask up, we may have to shut down again.”

Though 40 to 50 percent of people infected with COVID-19 never develop symptoms and 80 percent of those who do recover, the oddsgetwor­seforolder­and heavier people. Masud, for instance, rates Trump’s chances as “good, not excellent” because he’s in his mid-70s and has a bodymass index of 30, a number that fits into the obese classifica­tion.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, people 65 to 74 years of age have a 90 times greater likelihood of dying from COVID-19 than those 19 to 28. People 75 to 84 have have a 220 times greater likelihood.

Also, that Trump developed symptoms so quickly suggests that he has an abundance of the virus, said

one doctor. Such a “high viral load” is typically more difficult to treat.

But doctors interviewe­d acknowledg­ed Trump may have indeed been taken to Walter Reed “out of an abundance of caution,” as a White House statement said. Robert Atmar, a Baylor infectious disease doctor, said that “on the plus side, the infection was identified early, Trump was started on potentiall­y effective therapy and he has top doctors taking care of him.”

The choice of an experiment­al treatment, a monoclonal antibody cocktail, was something of a surprise given first-line, early-stage therapy is typically two drugs granted emergency approval — remdesivir, an anti-viral developed for Ebola that has shown modest benefits; and convalesce­nt plasma therapy, which is based on the idea that transfusin­g patients with the blood plasma of recover

ed patients transfers its healing power. Plasma therapy has received a lot of attention, but the evidence for it is still limited.

Doctors said the antibody cocktail — Regeneron’s REGN-COV2 — was a reasonable choice. Though still in clinical trials, it is considered highly promising, particular­ly after a recent company press release reported that trial participan­ts who got the cocktail cleared the virus and got over their symptoms significan­tly faster than those on a placebo. The trial has not yet been published.

Antibody cocktails are synthetica­lly produced versions of proteins made by the immune system that target the spike protein that the virus uses to attach to and infect cells. Ed Jones, director of the Methodist Research Institute, calls it “the next evolution of plasma therapy, more specific to the virus, able to get more shots

on goal.” He said that’s what he would recommend to friends if they get COVID-19.

Trump’s physician confirmed that Trump was givenREGN-COV2 intravenou­sly, at the White House. He did not confirm a report Friday that Trumpwas also given remdesivir. The two drugs are considered compatible, one working on the virus, the other with the immune system.

White House officials said Trump is not taking hydroxychl­oroquine, the anti-malarial drug he claimed to be using as a preventati­ve during the summer.

The best results for COVID-19 have come from dexamethas­one, an approved steroid used in a wide range of conditions for its anti-inflammato­ry and immunosupp­ressant effects. But if it were used to treat Trump, it would be a sign his disease had become severe. The drug tamps down an out-ofcontrol immune response, a problem in severe cases.

“The bottom line is we don’t have enough data to know the severity of Trump’s case,” said Dr. Bela Patel, a critical care medicine specialist at UTHealth and Memorial Hermann Hospital. “People his age do recover, but his age and weight definitely put him at higher risk.”

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press ?? People look toward the White House on Friday as Marine One waits to carry President Donald Trump to Walter Reed Hospital, which Texas doctors said was a sign his case may be more serious than was thought.
J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press People look toward the White House on Friday as Marine One waits to carry President Donald Trump to Walter Reed Hospital, which Texas doctors said was a sign his case may be more serious than was thought.

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