Calgary Herald

Malaria drug tied to risk of death

No confirmed benefit to patients found

- MICHAEL ERMAN AND ANKUR BANERJEE

The malaria drug hydroxychl­oroquine, which U.S. President Donald Trump says he has been taking and has urged others to use, was tied to increased risk of death in hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients, according to a large study published in the medical journal Lancet.

In the study that looked at over 96,000 people hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19, those treated with hydroxychl­oroquine or the related chloroquin­e had higher risk of death than patients who were not given the medicines.

The authors said they could not confirm whether taking the drug resulted in any benefit in coronaviru­s patients.

“Urgent confirmati­on from randomized clinical trials is needed,” they wrote. This study was not a placebo-controlled trial.

Hospitaliz­ed patients tend to have a more severe version of COVID-19. Some proponents of the drugs as treatments for the disease argue that they may need to be administer­ed at an earlier stage in order to be effective.

There are ongoing randomized, controlled clinical trials to study the drug’s effectiven­ess in preventing infection by the new coronaviru­s as well as treating mild to moderate COVID-19. Some of those trials may yield results within weeks.

Demand for hydroxychl­oroquine has surged as Trump repeatedly pushed for its use against the coronaviru­s. “What have you got to lose,” he said.

This week, Trump said he has been taking hydroxychl­oroquine as a preventati­ve medicine, despite a lack of scientific evidence.

The Lancet study authors suggested the medicines should not be used to treat COVID-19 outside of clinical trials until those studies confirm their safety and efficacy for COVID-19 patients.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion has said hydroxychl­oroquine should only be used for hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients or those in clinical trials. The drug has been tied to dangerous heart rhythm problems.

The Lancet study looked at data from 671 hospitals, where 14,888 patients were given either hydroxychl­oroquine or chloroquin­e, with or without an antibiotic, and 81,144 patients who were not treated with those drugs.

Both hydroxychl­oroquine and chloroquin­e have shown evidence of being effective against the coronaviru­s in a lab setting, but studies of the drugs in patients have proven inconclusi­ve at best.

Several small studies in Europe and China spurred interest in using hydroxychl­oroquine against COVID-19, but were criticized for lacking scientific rigour.

Several more recent studies have not shown the drug to be an effective treatment for the disease.

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