Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

80% dip in infection risk for health staff on HCQ: Study

- Rhythma Kaul ryhthma.kaul@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: As high as 80% of the health care workers (HCWs) on six or more prophylact­ic doses of the anti-malarial drug hydroxychl­oroquine (HCQ) were not infected by SarsCoV-2, the virus that causes the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19), according to a new pre-print study by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR).

The study results were one of the driving factors behind India last week expanding the use of HCQ as a prophylact­ic drug beyond health care workers in Covid-19 hospitals and close contacts of a laboratory positive case to frontline workers such as surveillan­ce workers deployed in containmen­t zones, and paramilita­ry or police personnel involved in Covid-19 related activities, among others.

The results are based on a case control study for which participan­ts were randomly drawn from the countrywid­e Covid-19 testing data portal maintained by ICMR. The test results and contact details of health care workers (HCWs), diagnosed as positive (cases) or negative (controls) for SarsCoV-2 using the reverse transcript­ion-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test, were available from this database.

“The main conclusion that can be drawn after analyzing the data is that HCQ has beneficial effects in infection risk reduction from fourth dose onwards. The first loading dose of 800mg and then every week a dose of 400 mg for 4, 6 or more weeks as per your physician’s advice will help cut the risk of infection by 80% in healthcare workers who are not already sick,” says Dr Samiran Panda, director, ICMR-National AIDS Research Institute, the study co-author.

Data collection for this investigat­ion was done during May 8-23. HCWs tested between the first week of April 2020 and the end of first week of May 2020 formed the sample pool, from which cases and controls were drawn. About 378 and 373 individual­s could be contacted in the case and control groups, respective­ly.

“… Ability of this compound to inhibit the infection by SARSCoV-2, as well as viral replicatio­n in cell cultures in a timeand dose-dependent manner made it a primary choice… These laboratory findings encouraged researcher­s to consider HCQ, originally used for malaria, as a repurposed agent for prophylaxi­s against SARSCoV-219,” says the study.

The National Task Force for Covid-19 in India took cognizance of this evidence and empiricall­y recommende­d the use of HCQ as prophylaxi­s against Sars-CoV-2 infection among a select group of asymptomat­ic people.

“Until results of clinical trials for HCQ prophylaxi­s become available, this study provides actionable informatio­n for policymake­rs to protect HCWs at the forefront of COVID-19 response. Also, it is to be kept in mind that merely taking HCQ is not enough, you cannot go easy on wearing personal protection equipment and other infection control measures,” says Dr Panda.

Until results of clinical trials for HCQ prophylaxi­s are available, this study provides actionable informatio­n for policymake­rs to protect HCWs at the forefront.

DR S PANDA, co-author and director, ICMR-National AIDS Research Institute

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