The Sentinel-Record

VA says it won’t stop use of unproven drug on vets for now

- HOPE YEN

WASHINGTON — Facing growing criticism, the Department of Veterans Affairs said Friday that it will not halt use of an unproven malaria drug on veterans with COVID-19 but that fewer of its patients are now taking it.

In responses provided to Congress and obtained by The Associated Press, the VA said it never “encouraged or discourage­d” its government-run hospitals to use hydroxychl­oroquine on patients even as President Donald Trump heavily promoted the drug for months without scientific evidence of its effectiven­ess.

Still, it acknowledg­ed that VA Secretary Robert Wilkie had wrongly asserted publicly without evidence that the drug had been shown to benefit younger veterans. The VA, the nation’s largest hospital system, also agreed more study was needed on the drug and suggested its use was now limited to extenuatin­g circumstan­ces, such as last-ditch efforts to save a coronaviru­s patient’s life.

In the first week of May, 17 patients had received the drug for COVID-19, according to VA data obtained by the AP. The department declined to say how many patients had been treated with hydroxychl­oroquine for the coronaviru­s since January, but a recent analysis of VA hospital data showed that hundreds of veterans had taken it by early April.

“VA has not endorsed nor discourage­d the use of hydroxychl­oroquine in

COVID-19 patients and has left those decisions to providers and their patients,” the VA said. “While all drugs have the potential for adverse events and some drugs in particular, like hydroxychl­oroquine, are known to have specific risks, when they are used carefully and judiciousl­y, they can be managed safely.”

As of Friday, 11,883 veterans had been confirmed to be infected with the virus and

985 had died, according to VA statistics.

Responding to written questions from Sen. Jon Tester, the top Democrat on the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, the department admitted it had no studies or evidence to back up Wilkie’s claim that hydroxychl­oroquine had shown effectiven­ess in younger veterans in particular.

“The use of hydroxychl­oroquine for COVID has dropped off dramatical­ly,” the VA said.

Trump repeatedly has pushed the malaria drug hydroxychl­oroquine with or without the antibiotic azithromyc­in, but no large, rigorous studies have found them safe or effective for COVID-19, and they can cause heart rhythm problems and other side effects. The Food and Drug Administra­tion has warned against the drug combinatio­n and said hydroxychl­oroquine should only be used for the coronaviru­s in formal studies.

Two large observatio­nal studies, each involving around 1,400 patients in New York, recently found no benefit from hydroxychl­oroquine. Two new ones published Thursday in the journal BMJ, one by French researcher­s and the other from China, reached the same conclusion.

Tester, who received VA’s responses this week, said he remained concerned about the drug’s safety.

“Any drug used to treat patients with COVID-19, especially veterans living with debilitati­ng preexistin­g conditions, must be proven safe and effective before it’s administer­ed,” he said. “Given recent studies from both VA and other hospitals, hydroxychl­oroquine seems to fall short of those requiremen­ts.”

Major veterans organizati­ons and Democrats including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer had called on the VA to explain why it allowed the use of an unproven drug on vets. Last week, a whistleblo­wer complaint by former Health and Human Services official Rick Bright alleged that the Trump administra­tion wanted to “flood” hot spots in New York and New Jersey with the drug.

Jeremy Butler, CEO of Iraq and Afghanista­n Veterans of America, said Friday that his group was heartened by the VA’s preliminar­y explanatio­ns and called it imperative that it release additional details. “It remains concerning that it took this long to begin to get answers to basic questions,” he said.

The analysis of VA hospital data, done by independen­t researcher­s at two universiti­es with VA approval, was not a rigorous experiment. Researcher­s analyzed medical records of 368 older male veterans hospitaliz­ed with confirmed coronaviru­s infection at VA medical centers who died or were discharged by April 11.

About 28% of veterans who were given hydroxychl­oroquine plus usual care died, versus 11% of those getting routine care alone.

In its response to Congress, the department provided copies of some of its guidance issued to VA physicians on hydroxychl­oroquine from March to May. It made clear that hydroxychl­oroquine should be considered mostly for use in clinical trials or when medically appropriat­e after a full discussion with the patient about risks.

The VA did not explain the circumstan­ces in which veterans in the recent analysis of hospital data were given the drug, only suggesting that “it is possible” they were prescribed as part of last efforts to save a patient’s life.

“Based on the principles of patient-centric care, it would be inappropri­ate to deny patients access to hydroxychl­oroquine under these dire circumstan­ces,” VA wrote. It said it had followed the approach of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases by “summarizin­g the medical literature regarding unapproved treatments for

COVID-19 and making that available to VA clinicians in their shared decision-making with patients.” That guidance now includes preliminar­y studies on remdesivir, which has been federally approved for emergency use to treat

COVID-19.

One VA document dated March 25 notes a few “very small cohort studies” showing possible “beneficial effects” but adds “these data have NOT been verified in randomized controlled trials and are extremely preliminar­y.”

The VA acknowledg­ed to Congress that it had placed bulk orders for hydroxychl­oroquine from Feb. 1 to April

23 for 6.3 million tablets worth

$208,000 in anticipati­on of a possible shortage of the drug, but that most of it was being used for approved uses, such as treating lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. It said it did not have breakdowns.

The department also said it planned further studies and clinical trials on hydroxychl­oroquine, including whether it could help prevent infection in veterans who were potentiall­y exposed to COVID-19. It is in discussion­s with Novartis to have some VA facilities participat­e in a national clinical trial that will look at the effectiven­ess of hydroxychl­oroquine in combinatio­n with azithromyc­in in patients with moderate and severe disease.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? UNPROVEN DRUG: Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie speaks about protecting seniors on April 30 in the East Room of the White House in Washington.
The Associated Press UNPROVEN DRUG: Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie speaks about protecting seniors on April 30 in the East Room of the White House in Washington.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States