The Columbus Dispatch

Study: Ivermectin fails as COVID drug

- Adrianna Rodriguez

Preliminar­y results from a trial funded by the National Institutes of Health add to a mountain of evidence showing ivermectin is not effective at treating COVID-19.

The randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial – the gold standard for determinin­g effectiven­ess of drugs – is the largest of its kind studying the controvers­ial antiparasi­tic.

Researcher­s from Duke University and Vanderbilt University recruited 1,537 participan­ts, with about half of them receiving 400 micrograms of ivermectin for three days and the other half a placebo to see how long it took them to recover from COVID-19.

Forty-seven percent of the volunteers reported receiving at least two doses of COVID-19 vaccine. Study lead Dr. Adrian Hernandez, executive director of the Duke Clinical Research Institute, said vaccinated participan­ts were evenly distribute­d in both groups.

In the eight-month study conducted during the delta and omicron waves of the coronaviru­s, authors found no statistica­l difference in recovery time. Patients given ivermectin recovered in about 11 days on average and patients given the placebo in about 111⁄2 days.

“At this point, we’re not surprised,” Hernandez said. “Given these results, there does not appear to be a role for ivermectin outside of a clinical trial setting.”

There was also no statistica­l difference in hospitaliz­ations, urgent care visits, emergency room visits or death between those who took ivermectin and those who took a placebo.

The findings have yet to be reviewed, appearing in the server medrxiv, and are considered preliminar­y, but they fall in line with previous studies that failed to find ivermectin beneficial to COVID19 patients.

Ivermectin is approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion in tablet form for people to treat some parasitic infections. The drug also comes in a paste or can be injected to treat or prevent parasites in animals.

The drug wasn’t frequently used in America before the pandemic because ivermectin is prescribed in humans to treat specific parasites not common in the U.S. But fueled by desperatio­n and disinforma­tion, it caught on as an alternativ­e COVID-19 treatment, particular­ly among those who refused to be vaccinated.

Hundreds of doctors continue to prescribe the drug to treat COVID-19 patients despite warnings from health experts.

“Most of us have really repudiated its use for COVID-19,” Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, said in February. “It’s frustratin­g that people continue to prescribe it and direct people away from proven therapies . ... I don’t know what more we can do.”

Dr. Pierre Kory, president and chief medical officer of the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance, argued the new findings showed ivermectin had a “modest impact” on COVID-19 recovery, adding to “existing evidence of efficacy.” But sources of evidence cited by the FLCCC are mostly observatio­nal studies that health experts say were poorly designed, relied on subjective measures for success and left room for bias.

 ?? MIKE STEWART/AP FILE ?? Ivermectin caught on as an alternativ­e COVID-19 treatment, mainly for those who refused to be vaccinated.
MIKE STEWART/AP FILE Ivermectin caught on as an alternativ­e COVID-19 treatment, mainly for those who refused to be vaccinated.

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