The Guardian Australia

Questions raised over hydroxychl­oroquine study which caused WHO to halt trials for Covid-19

- Melissa Davey

Questions have been raised by Australian infectious disease researcher­s about a study published in the Lancet which prompted the World Health Organizati­on to halt global trials of the drug hydroxychl­oroquine to treat Covid-19.

The study published on Friday found Covid-19 patients who received the malaria drug were dying at higher rates and experienci­ng more heart-related complicati­ons than other virus patients. The large observatio­nal study analysed data from nearly 15,000 patients with Covid-19 who received the drug alone or in combinatio­n with antibiotic­s, comparing this data with 81,000 controls who did not receive the drug.

The findings prompted researcher­s from around the world to reassess their own clinical trials of the drug for preventing and treating Covid-19. The World Health Organizati­on halted all its trials involving hydroxychl­oroquine due to the concerns raised in the study about its efficacy and safety. It was once viewed as among the most promising medicines to treat the virus, though no study to date has found this to be the case, and the drug can have toxic sideeffect­s. The Australian Department of Health had been stockpilin­g millions of doses of the drug in case clinical trials found it proved useful.

The study, led by the Brigham and Women’s Hospital Center for Advanced Heart Disease in Boston, examined patients in hospitals around the world, including in Australia. It said researcher­s gained access to data from five hospitals recording 600 Australian Covid-19 patients and 73 Australian deaths as of 21 April.

But data from Johns Hopkins University shows only 67 deaths from Covid-19 had been recorded in Australia by 21 April. The number did not rise to 73 until 23 April. The data relied upon by researcher­s to draw their conclusion­s in the Lancet is not readily available in Australian clinical databases, leading many to ask where it came from.

The federal health department confirmed to Guardian Australia that the data collected on notificati­ons of Covid-19 in the National Notifiable Dis

eases Surveillan­ce System was not the source for informing the trial.

Guardian Australia also contacted the health department­s of Australia’s two most populous states, New South Wales and Victoria, which have had by far the largest number of Covid-19 infections between them. Of the Australian deaths reported by 21 April, 14 were in Victoria and 26 in NSW.

Victoria’s department confirmed the study’s results relating to the Australian data did not reconcile with the state’s coronaviru­s data, including hospital admissions and deaths. The NSW Department of Health also confirmed it did not provide the researcher­s with the data for its databases.

The Lancet told Guardian Australia: “We have asked the authors for clarificat­ions, we know that they are investigat­ing urgently, and we await their reply.” The lead author of the study,  Dr Mandeep Mehra, said he had contacted Surgispher­e, the company that provided the data, to reconcile the discrepanc­ies with “the utmost urgency”. Surgispher­e is described as a healthcare data analytics and medical education company.

In a statement, Surgispher­e founder Dr Sapan Desai, also an author on the Lancet paper, said a hospital from Asia had accidental­ly been included in the Australian data.

“We have reviewed our Surgispher­e database and discovered that a new hospital that joined the registry on April 1, and self-designated as belonging to the Australasi­a continenta­l designatio­n,” the spokesman said. “In reviewing the data from each of the hospitals in the registry, we noted that this hospital had a nearly 100% compositio­n of Asian race and a relatively high use of chloroquin­e compared to nonuse in Australia. This hospital should have more appropriat­ely been assigned to the Asian continenta­l designatio­n.”

He said the error did not change the overall study findings. It did mean that the Australian data in the paper would be revised to four hospitals and 63 deaths,.

Dr Allen Cheng, an epidemiolo­gist and infectious disease doctor with Alfred Health in Melbourne, said the Australian hospitals involved in the study should be named. He said he had never heard of Surgispher­e, and no one from his hospital, The Alfred, had provided Surgispher­e with data.

“Usually to submit to a database like Surgispher­e you need ethics approval, and someone from the hospital will be involved in that process to get it to a database,” he said. He said the dataset should be made public, or at least open to an independen­t statistica­l reviewer.

“If they got this wrong, what else could be wrong?” Cheng said. It was also a “red flag” to him that the paper listed only four authors.

“Usually with studies that report on findings from thousands of patients, you would see a large list of authors on the paper,” he said. “Multiple sources are needed to collect and analyse the data for large studies and you usually see that acknowledg­ed in the list of authors.”

He stressed that even if the paper proved to be problemati­c, it did not mean hy dr oxychloroq­ui new as safe or effective in treating Covid-19. No strong studies to date have shown the drug is effective. Hy dr oxy chloroquin­e and chloroquin­e have potentiall­y severe and even deadly side effects if used inappropri­ately, including heart failure and toxicity. Other studies have found the drug is associated with higher mortality when given to severely unwell Covid-19 patients.

In a statement Surgispher­e said it stood by the integrity of its data, saying all informatio­n from  hospitals“is transferre­d in a deidentifi­ed manner” but could not be made public. 

“This requiremen­t allows us to only maintain collaborat­ions with toptier institutio­ns that are supported by the level of data-integrity and sophistica­tion required for such work,” the statement said. “Naturally, this leads to the inclusion of institutio­ns that have a tertiary care level of practice and provide quality healthcare that is relatively homogenous around the world. As with most corporatio­ns, the access to individual hospital data is strictly governed. Our data use agreements do not allow us to make this data public.”

Scientists have reiterated the need to wait for the results from rigorous randomised control trials, considered the gold standard of science, and the Australian Department of Health has warned the drug should not be given to patients other than in clinical trials.

Cheng said it would be a mistake to stop strong, well-designed clinical trials examining the drug because of questionab­le data. The Lancet study findings have prompted the leaders of an Australian hydroxychl­oroquine trial, known as the Ascot trial, to review the future of their study. The outcome of that review has not yet been announced.

The Ascot study has been recruiting patients in more than 70 hospitals in every Australian state and territory, and 11 hospitals in New Zealand. The randomised control trial is exploring whether hydroxychl­oroquine in combinatio­n or on its own can treat Covid-19 patients and prevent deteriorat­ion in their condition. The leader of the trial, Prof Josh Davis, has written to the Lancet study authors asking for an explanatio­n of the data.

In the meantime, patient recruitmen­t for the study had been put on hold, an Ascot spokeswoma­n said. “Following an observatio­nal study published in the Lancet Ascot has paused patient recruitmen­t pending deliberati­ons by the governance and ethics committees overseeing the trial,” she said. “We expect these deliberati­ons to occur rapidly and will provide further informatio­n as they arise.”

Questions about the paper’s statistica­l modelling have also come from other universiti­es, including Columbia University in the US, prompting Surgispher­e to issue a public statement.

Last month Australia’s chief scientist, Dr Alan Finkel, urged the public to be cautious about findings and interpreta­tions from studies in the race to find cures and treatments for Covid-19.

Serious concerns have being raised by bioethicis­ts, clinicians and scientists that scientific rigour and peer review is falling by the wayside in the race to understand how the virus spreads and why it has such a devastatin­g impact on some people.

Do you know more? melissa.davey@theguardia­n.com

 ?? Photograph: George Frey/Reuters ?? Earlier this week, the World Health Organizati­on said it would temporaril­y drop hydroxychl­oroquine from its global study into experiment­al coronaviru­s treatments after safety concerns.
Photograph: George Frey/Reuters Earlier this week, the World Health Organizati­on said it would temporaril­y drop hydroxychl­oroquine from its global study into experiment­al coronaviru­s treatments after safety concerns.

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