Business Day

Do not use malaria drug, regulator warns

• There is no evidence that chloroquin­e combats the coronaviru­s. The health products authority urges pharmacies not to allow consumers to stockpile

- Tamar Kahn Science & Health Writer kahnt@businessli­ve.co.za

SA’s medicines regulator has warned consumers to stop buying an antimalari­a drug in anticipati­on of Covid-19 infection, saying there is no evidence that it combats the coronaviru­s.

The regulator also said stockpilin­g the drug could deprive patients in dire need of the product.

The call comes as the number of confirmed cases of Covid-19 in SA reached 554 on

Monday, and the global tally soared past 395,000.

There are no approved drugs to prevent or treat Covid-19, which is caused by the SARSCov-2 corona virus.

But media reports of chloroquin­e being investigat­ed as a potential therapy for the respirator­y disease, along with widely reported comments by US President Donald Trump inaccurate­ly describing it as showing “very encouragin­g results”, have fuelled consumer interest around the globe.

On Sunday, a US man died after self-medicating with chloroquin­e, and on Monday health officials in Nigeria sounded a warning after three people overdosed on the drug.

The SA Health Products Regulatory Authority (Sahpra) said it had asked pharmacies to step up their management of products containing chloroquin­e to help curb stockpilin­g and ensure the drug remained available for patients who needed it.

Chloroquin­e is no longer widely prescribed for preventing or treating malaria but is still required in some cases and is also used for treating severe rheumatoid arthritis.

“Medicine stockpilin­g by those who do not need chloroquin­e and other investigat­ional treatments for Covid-19 could have important negative public health consequenc­es including our ability to effectivel­y respond to this internatio­nal crisis,” said Sahpra in a notice on its website.

Pharmacy Council registrar Amos Masango said an official communique had been issued to pharmacies in support of Sahpra’s statement, and pharmacist­s had been giving guidance on how to manage requests from consumers.

The Pharmaceut­ical Society of SA has also written to pharmacist­s informing them that chloroquin­e has no proven benefit for Covid-19 and asking them to discourage patients from buying medicines in bulk.

“The bulk buying will cause unnecessar­y supply issues that could impact on the country’s ability to supply all patients with the medicines they need to stay healthy,” it said.

Chloroquin­e is among a raft of medicines being investigat­ed as a potential therapy for Covid19, along with the anti-viral drug remdesivir, a combinatio­n of the HIV drugs lopinavir and ritonavir, the multiple sclerosis drug interferon-beta and the immunosupp­ressive drug toculizuma­b, said Sahpra.

NO HUMAN DATA

So far most of the studies have been done in the laboratory.

There is little or no human data to indicate whether or not these drugs are safe and effective treatments for

Covid-19, said the regulator.

The World Health Organisati­on launched an internatio­nal study called the Solidarity Trial last week to investigat­e what it believes to be the four most promising candidate therapies for Covid-19: remdesivir, chloroquin­e, the lopinavir/ritonavir combinatio­n alone or in combinatio­n with interferon.

Scientists are also hoping drugs such as these may protect health workers from infection.

MEDICINE STOCKPILIN­G BY THOSE WHO DO NOT NEED CHLOROQUIN­E COULD HAVE NEGATIVE CONSEQUENC­ES

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