Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Hydroxychl­oroquine: Using anti-malaria drug is a risky business

US President Donald Trump, his Brazilian counterpar­t Bolsonaro and Tesla boss Elon Musk — all swear by the anti-malaria drug as an antidote to coronaviru­s. But studies show it is ineffectiv­e, and potentiall­y dangerous.

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US President Donald Trump has advocated the benefits of hydroxychl­oroquine since March now. And for the past week, he has been taking the anti-malaria drug on a daily basis, because he "thinks it is good."

The US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) warned against the supposed miracle cure at the end of April. Researcher­s said there was no substantia­l proof it was effective in combating the coronaviru­s. Defiant demonstrat­ion Trump's Brazilian counterpar­t, Jair Bolsonaro, has similarly propagated the the use of hydroxychl­oroquine. However, after visiting Trump in Florida in March, 20 members of his delegation tested positive for COVID-19, resulting in a PR disaster.

But as a former athlete and paratroope­r, Bolsonaro claimed the "minor flu" wasn't going to seriously affect him. The president continues to ignore social distancing and continues to shake hands.

In order to protect the population though, he ordered military laboratori­es to produce millions of tablets. And he fired two health ministers who refused decree the prescripti­on of the drug to COVID-19 patients.

Brazilian doctors fear that hundreds of patients died at home in the past few weeks after taking the potential cure without medical supervisio­n. However, the Health Ministry is still expected to make treatment with the drug its official policy this week.

Where does the enthusiasm come from ?

The active ingredient in the well-known malaria drug Resochin, chloroquin­e, with its derivative, hydroxychl­oroquine, have been used to prevent and treat malaria for decades.

In tests conducted in China and France, the active substance chloroquin­e was said to have inhibited the proliferat­ion of the novel coronaviru­s in cell cultures. That was taken to indicate that chloroquin­e could reduce the viral load in patients experienci­ng a severe progressio­n of the disease. It was thought the active ingredient could therefore be used as an antiviral drug, the researcher­s reported.

A recent study (albeit not peer reviewed), found that the mortality rate after treatment with hydroxychl­oroquine is significan­tly higher at 28%. In COVID-19 patients who were treated without the malaria drug, the mortality rate was 11%. The researcher­s evaluated the case files of 368 patients at US hospitals for military veterans.

Despite concerns about the methodolog­y of the studies, their significan­ce, and possible side effects, clinical tests with the well-known active substance have now been carried out in other places, too.

Read more: Coronaviru­s: Paper towels and coins beat hand dryers and banknotes

Fatal study in Brazil

A small phase II study in Brazil, in which 11 patients died of fatal arrhythmia­s or heart muscle damage, shows how risky high-dose treatment of COVID-19 patients with chloroquin­e can be, especially in combinatio­n with the antibiotic azithromyc­in or other drugs.

The study, which was financed by the Brazilian government and whose preliminar­y, not peer reviewed, results were published on the scientific portal MedRxiv, involved 81 hospital patients. Altogether 440 patients were ultimately supposed to participat­e in the phase IIb study "CloroCovid-19."

Marcus Lacerda's team from the Tropical Institute in Manaus in the Brazilian state of Amazonas administer­ed a dose of 450 milligrams of chloroquin­e twice a day for five days (total dose 2.7 grams) to about half of the patients. The other patients were prescribed a dose of more than 600 milligrams (total dose 12 grams) for 10 days. There was no placebo group.

Too high a dosage?

Normally, malaria drugs are used at a lower dosage and only for a few days. In Brazil, the dosage was even higher than suggested by the Chinese authoritie­s and the US Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The health authority of the Chinese province of Guangdong had recommende­d treatment with 500 mg twice daily for 10 days (total amount 10 grams). The CDC recommende­d an initial dose of 600 mg plus another 300 mg after 12 hours, followed by 300 mg twice a day on days two to five (total dose 3.3 grams).

The physicians in Brazil noticed arrhythmia (significan­t extension of the so-called QT interval) within two to three days in patients receiving the high dose. On the sixth day of the trial, 11 patients died and the phase II trial was stopped immediatel­y.

Were warnings ignored? Internal medicine specialist­s had already warned in the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal

about the dangers of QTc prolongati­on in the electrocar­diogram when using chloroquin­e and hydroxychl­oroquine — especially in combinatio­n with the antibiotic azithromyc­in.

According to that report, the combinatio­n can lead to hypoglycem­ia (abnormally low blood sugar levels), restlessne­ss, confusion and delusions, in addition to cardiac arrhythmia. An overdose can lead to epileptic seizures, coma and cardiac arrest, the report says.

Read more: Did coronaviru­s really originate in a Chinese laboratory?

Disastrous drug cocktail

Many COVID-19 patients are significan­tly older than malaria patients and often have preexistin­g conditions. In such a risk group, a high-dose treatment with chloroquin­e is presumably much more likely to lead to damage to the heart muscle and to severe cardiac arrhythmia.

As there was no placebo group in the Manaus study, it is difficult to see exactly what proportion of deaths were caused by chloroquin­e. This is because all patients were additional­ly treated with the antibiotic azithromyc­in, which also extends the QTc interval. Some patients had also taken oseltamivi­r (Tamiflu), which can also have a negative effect on cardiac rhythm.

Humans as guinea pigs? In principle, the two active i n g re d i e n t s c h l o ro q u i n e / hydroxychl­oroquine are wellknown and safe. The drug Resochin, developed by the German pharmaceut­ical and chemical group Bayer, has been successful­ly used as a malaria drug or prophylaxi­s since the 1930s.

However, the risks and side effects have been known for a similar length of time. Even such tried-and-tested drugs can cause severe damage if taken in extremely high doses, as wrong self-medication or by possibly endangered groups of people.

Investigat­ions must now show whether the clinical trial in Brazil negligentl­y overdosed patients or ignored warnings. The fatal outcome of the phase II study in Brazil coincides with a TV discussion, widely perceived as extremely racist, between two French doctors who wanted to turn Africa into a huge laboratory for coronaviru­s vaccine testing.

They cited the lack of resources on the continent and hence the lack of protection against the virus as the reason for their proposal. They said studies on AIDS had been done there on the same grounds. The provocativ­e discussion caused worldwide outrage.

Clinical tests remain necessary

In the search for a vaccine or drug — also against the new coronaviru­s SARS-CoV-2 — clinical tests are neverthele­ss essential. Only through the cooperatio­n of manufactur­ers, clinics and medical institutio­ns can it be clarified whether a drug actually shows the desired therapeuti­c effect (efficacy), whether it is safe or whether side effects

occur (tolerabili­ty), how exactly it has to be dosed (dose finding) and whether, in the end, the benefits actually outweigh the risks.

Phase II studies usually involve 100 to 500 volunteer patients as test persons. In most countries, there are strict legal requiremen­ts for the conduct of clinical trials in order to limit the risk to the trial participan­ts. In most countries, the volunteers' consent to participat­e must be given in writing in advance.

The treating physician is obliged to inform each participan­t in the trial in detail about the possible benefits and all risks — but risks and side effects can never be excluded.

Due to new research, this article has been updated since its original publicatio­n.

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