The Daily Telegraph

Hospitals told to ration virus ‘wonder drug’ due to shortage

- By Tony Diver

HOSPITALS have been ordered to ration prescripti­ons of the coronaviru­s “wonder drug” remdesivir after a shortage has left trusts without enough to go around.

Doctors have been told they must only give the drug to early-stage coronaviru­s patients, not to people who have already been admitted to intensive care units and placed on a ventilator.

An internal NHS memo says patients receiving the drug “should not be receiving ongoing mechanical ventilatio­n” and prescripti­ons should be kept to five days because of a “supply disruption”.

NHS Trusts should also share their stocks of remdesivir with regional supply centres to ensure it is administer­ed to patients who would benefit the most.

While the Department of Health maintains there “remain plenty of remdesivir supplies”, deliveries of the drug to hospitals are likely to be disrupted until the end of October, The Daily Telegraph understand­s.

A spokesman for the department did not respond to questions about why the drug’s supply had been delayed.

Remdesivir is an antiviral medication administer­ed via injection that has been proven to inhibit the spread of the infection in patients and reduce the chance of them requiring intensive care.

It has been shown in trials to reduce recovery times from 15 to 11 days, but has not yet been shown to have an effect on mortality rates.

It is manufactur­ed by the US pharmaceut­ical giant Gilead Sciences, based in California.

There had been supply shortages across the world over the summer. The company says shortages are due to a lack of a “coordinate­d global supply chain” for distributi­ng the drug.

A Department of Health spokesman said: “While there remain plenty of remdesivir supplies, we have asked the NHS to temporaril­y prioritise patients to ensure those most likely to benefit can access it.”

The department said patients were receiving other drugs including “dexamethas­one or hydrocorti­sone which have been proved to save lives”.

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