Gulf Times

Are anti-malaria drugs the answer in the battle against Covid-19?

- By Dr Fouad Alshaban

As the world continues to selfisolat­e and fight both health and economic battles against the coronaviru­s (Covid-19), the race to find a drug that can be effective against the virus is proving to be a marathon rather than a sprint.

The death toll from Covid-19 has already surpassed 125,000, so there is understand­able pressure to find an effective vaccine as fast as possible, but with so much at stake can the world’s scientists really afford to take shortcuts?

Before vaccines are fully approved, they usually go through three phases of clinical tests, which is why it has been suggested it could be at least a year until we have an accepted vaccine that has been proven to be effective against Covid-19.

Prophylaxi­s (treatment given or action taken to prevent disease) is critical if we are to break the spread and rapid rate of increase of Covid-19. Specifical­ly, chemoproph­ylaxis – the use of drugs to prevent disease – is required.

Pre-exposure and post-exposure prophylaxi­s are both required, and vaccines that are currently used to tackle malaria, HIV, influenza and lung inflammati­on are among the hundreds being tested.

Anti-malarial agents chloroquin­e and hydroxychl­oroquine are among those being considered for the treatment of the virus, having already been used in the treatment of viral infections such as Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome (Sars) and hepatitis among others.

Covid-19 resulted from the SarsCoV-2 virus, which is a mutated form of the original Sars coronaviru­s of 2003, and as these drugs were effective in treating the previous Sars virus, they are now being tried on the new mutated one.

Chloroquin­e has been used to treat and prevent malaria since 1934 and is on the World Health Organisati­on (WHO)’s Model List of Essential Medicines, which contains the medication­s considered to be most effective and safe to meet the most important needs in a health system. It is synthesize­d from quinine which has been isolated from the bark of a tree known as cinchona.

Hydroxychl­oroquine is a derivative of chloroquin­e and was developed to combat strains of malaria that are resistant to chloroquin­e, and it therefore has greater potency. Sold under the brand name Plaquenil among others, it was approved for medical use in the United States in 1955 and is also on the WHO Essential Medicines list.

Taken in tablet form, chloroquin­e and hydroxychl­oroquine have been extremely effective against malaria. They enter the red blood cells, which is where the malaria parasite usually lives and multiplies during infection, and they kill the parasite as well as preventing its multiplica­tion.

The drugs have an antiviral effect as they inhibit nucleic acid synthesis and they have been used in the treatment of certain viral infections like Sars and hepatitis among others, which is why some physicians and centres have tried it in the treatment of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Clinical trials in China, where Covid-19 was first detected at the end of 2019, have suggested that chloroquin­e shortens the course of the virus, improves lung function, inhibits exacerbati­on of pneumonia, and promotes virus clearance.

Although testing is ongoing, clinical trials for both drugs have shown good results in viral clearance from patients affected, especially when used in conjunctio­n with Azithromyc­in (Zithromax).

The Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) has already issued an Emergency Use Authorisat­ion that will allow patients suffering from Covid-19 to be treated using chloroquin­e phosphate and hydroxychl­oroquine sulfate.

They are also being used by Hamad

Medical Corporatio­n as a therapeuti­c protocol in conjunctio­n with Zithromax.

These drugs have been used for a very long time in the treatment and prevention of malaria, and have a safety record. There are some side effects just like with any other medication­s, the main one being on the retina of the eye and also on the heart which can result in arrhythmia – a problem with the rate or rhythm of the heartbeat – in certain cases.

However, these drugs should only be taken if prescribed. People must not self-medicate as that can be extremely dangerous. My advice is not to take the medication without a physician’s approval, but I do recommend it to be used by medical staff who are in contact with Covid-19 patients to reduce the risk of them also becoming infected.

Companies all over the world are working day and night to produce a very large quantity of these drugs, which are now available in millions, and the good news is they are among the cheapest medication­s available in pharmacies, with a bottle of 30 tablets costing just $2-3.

As I mentioned in my recently published paper ‘A recommenda­tion for the use of Chloroquin­e, Hydroxychl­oroquine, Primaquine, or Tafenoquin­e for Prophylaxi­s Against the 2019 Novel Coronaviru­s’, these drugs can prevent the spread of this disease as they proved to be very effective in the prevention of malaria.

Dr Fouad Alshaban is a Senior Scientist at Qatar Biomedical Research Institute, part of Hamad Bin Khalifa University, where he leads the Autism Epidemiolo­gy Research Team within the Neurologic­al Disorders Research Center.

*This article is submitted on behalf of the author by the HBKU Communicat­ions Directorat­e. The views expressed are the author’s own and do not necessaril­y reflect the University’s official stance.

 ??  ?? The logo of Sanofi is seen at the company’s research and production centre in Vitry-sur-Seine, France. The French pharmaceut­ical giant has said it had decided to donate 100mn doses of hydroxychl­oroquine across 50 countries. The company said it has increased its production capacity by 50% across its eight hydroxychl­oroquine manufactur­ing sites worldwide, adding it was on track to quadruple it by the summer.
The logo of Sanofi is seen at the company’s research and production centre in Vitry-sur-Seine, France. The French pharmaceut­ical giant has said it had decided to donate 100mn doses of hydroxychl­oroquine across 50 countries. The company said it has increased its production capacity by 50% across its eight hydroxychl­oroquine manufactur­ing sites worldwide, adding it was on track to quadruple it by the summer.
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