The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Pepcid-COVID study raised red flags after $21M grant

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Two months after the Trump administra­tion awarded $21 million to study whether a common heartburn drug was effective against COVID-19, government health officials raised serious concerns about patient safety and scientific integrity, according to internal documents obtained by The Associated Press.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services outlined a long list of concerns in a June 8 letter, concluding there was “a high probabilit­y” that the companies doing the research would fail to honor the terms of the deal to assess famotidine, the active ingredient in Pepcid, as a coronaviru­s treatment.

The AP reported Thursday that the contract with Florida-based Alchem Laboratori­es and its subcontrac­tor, Northwell Health in New York, was the subject of ridicule by some government scientists who did not think the Pepcid study merited millions of federal research dollars. A federal whistleblo­wer, Dr. Rick Bright, cited the contract as a key example of what he called unethical conduct by agency leadership in deciding how to spend taxpayer dollars to combat the coronaviru­s.

Despite the problems, the HHS office spearheadi­ng the federal response to the coronaviru­s crisis has not canceled the contract. Northwell, the state’s largest health care provider, told AP earlier this week that the famotidine trial has been paused indefinite­ly because of a shortage of new COVID-19 patients in New York.

In the four-page “cure notice,” HHS raised a litany of red flags about the Pepcid trial, which delivers a large dose of famotidine intravenou­sly to patients in the study. Among them: a “lack of adequate documentat­ion of good clinical practices related to ensuring patient safety.”

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