Miami Herald (Sunday)

Doctor gambles on clot-busting drug to save virus patients

- BY LAURAN NEERGAARD Associated Press

WASHINGTON

The woman was dying. New York’s Mount Sinai Hospital was about to call her husband and break the news that there was nothing left to try. Then Dr. Hooman Poor took a gamble.

With high-stress, highstakes decisions, doctors around the world are franticall­y trying to figure out how COVID-19 is killing their patients so they can attempt new ways to fight back. One growing theory: In the sickest of the sick, little blood clots clog the lungs.

Poor couldn’t prove it.

The tests required would further endanger his staff, who were already at risk of getting the virus. But the lung specialist saw clues that were “screaming blood clots.” So Poor pulled out a drug best known for treating strokes, and held his breath.

“I said, ‘What do we actually have to lose?’ ” Poor told The Associated Press. “That’s when I decided to give not just a blood thinner, but a blood clot buster.”

Exactly what’s going on with blood clots in at least some COVID-19 patients is a mystery.

Chinese doctors were first to sound the alarm. In March, Chinese heart specialist­s advised the American College of Cardiology to watch for clots and said certain blood tests showing a rise in clot risk might signal which patients were in greatest danger. Other reports suggested the clots can show up all over the body. But were they a cause of deteriorat­ion or an effect?

Already, many hospitals are attempting preventive doses of blood thinners to keep clots from forming. There’s huge debate over what kind to try, what dose is safe — the drugs can cause dangerous bleeding — and how soon to start.

In New York, Poor was going a step further with a drug named tPA that doesn’t prevent clots — it breaks them up.

It’s an example of how, with no vaccine or approved treatment for the coronaviru­s, many overwhelme­d doctors are following trails of clues to figure out what to try next.

Poor’s 55-year-old patient wasn’t getting enough oxygen even after doctors rolled her onto her stomach for an extreme ventilatio­n technique called “prone positionin­g.” She was in shock.

Other organs were failing fast.

Twenty minutes after the injection of tPA, her oxygen levels rose. Poor was elated. But not for long.

“She gets better, but then she starts to get worse,” he said. “Most likely we’re breaking up the clot, but she is immediatel­y forming the clot again.”

So he next tried something novel, putting the woman on a low-dose drip of tPA for about 24 hours together with a blood thinner, in hopes of chipping away at existing clots while blocking new ones.

To Poor’s dismay, the experiment­al treatment bought the woman only a few more days of life. A sudden, different complicati­on killed her on Friday.

But last weekend, Poor’s team tested the new clotfighti­ng approach in four additional severely ill patients. One didn’t survive, dying of cardiac arrest from a massive blood clot in his heart.

The rest saw improvemen­t in oxygen levels and shock. As of Friday, three remained on ventilator­s but were doing better, especially one who had been treated soon after her lungs failed. In a new report, Poor called for urgent study of whether abnormal clotting drives at least some people’s deteriorat­ion, even as his own hospital updated treatment advice for its sickest patients.

Others are onto the same lead. Specialist­s at the University of Colorado and Harvard recently published a similar tPA research call, and cited three additional cases where it was tried as hospitals in Colorado and Massachuse­tts prepare for a study.

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