Orlando Sentinel

Another dubious COVID-19 treatment

- By Faye Flam

Better drugs to treat COVID-19 look more appealing than ever. The hope that vaccines would send the virus into retreat with herd immunity is fading as the more transmissi­ble delta variant sweeps across the globe, cases rise, and the vaccine-hesitant millions dig in.

Beyond that, it’s unnerving to learn of even extremely rare cases where young, healthy people suffer and die from conditions possibly tied to vaccines: blood clots, heart inflammati­on and, most recently, the paralyzing disease known as Guillain-Barre syndrome.

Such rare but awful outcomes would seem more tolerable in a drug that cured the sick, and now that clinical studies have dampened enthusiasm for hydroxychl­oroquine, touted early in the pandemic by President Donald Trump, some scientists are pointing to promising studies of an anti-parasitic medicine called Ivermectin. Both drugs held particular appeal because they had already passed safety screening and were being used to combat other human diseases.

And last week it looked like some welcome good news had come from a review article concluding that Ivermectin can prevent severe disease and save lives.

That study is getting attention in libertaria­n-leaning and conservati­ve media. A focus on treating the sick appeals more to the personal-responsibi­lity ethic embraced by conservati­ves, while those on the left are more comfortabl­e with the collectivi­st ethic of accepting the small risk and discomfort associated with vaccines for the good of society.

But there’s a problem. Experts disagree on the conclusion­s to be drawn from clinical studies of Ivermectin, and the laboratory experiment­s that propelled the drug into trials in the first place suggest that it only fights the virus effectivel­y at doses likely to be toxic.

As with hydroxychl­oroquine, high hopes for Ivermectin owe more to politics than to science.

Effective treatments for viral diseases are even rarer than effective vaccines, according to the medicinal chemist Derek Lowe, who has worked for multiple pharmaceut­ical companies and writes a drug developmen­t blog for Science Magazine called “In the Pipeline.”

A recently discovered cure for hepatitis C is a rare exception, along with the drug cocktail that prevents HIV infections from progressin­g to AIDS. There are drugs that can control but not cure herpes. And that’s the extent of Lowe’s list of highly effective antiviral drugs.

Most drugs that kill a foreign invader are also likely to be somewhat toxic — so it’s tricky to find mechanisms that destroy them and spare us. It’s usually easier to kill parasites and bacteria than viruses, Lowe said, because the larger pathogens have more working parts that might be more vulnerable to chemical disruption than human cells.

Vaccines, by contrast, tend to prevent viral disease with fewer side effects because they work not by toxicity but by stimulatin­g the immune system. And the animal immune system has had hundreds of thousands of years to get good at killing invaders.

Ivermectin was chosen for clinical testing for legitimate reasons. It’s true, as some detractors have said, that it’s used as a deworming medication for sheep and other farm animals. But it’s also one of the few miracle drugs for humans, having saved hundreds of thousands of people from going blind with onchocerci­asis, also known as river blindness, or suffering from the limb-swelling disease elephantia­sis. The drug’s discoverer­s won a Nobel Prize in 2015.

One of the co-inventors, William Campbell, then at Merck & Co., developed a new technique for screening large numbers of compounds to find ones that might kill parasites — eventually leading to a positive signal from a compound isolated from soil bacteria found near a golf course in Japan.

Large-scale screening techniques allowed scientists to discover that the drug also fought SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. It’s always appealing to start with a drug that’s already in use, Lowe said, because safety data has already been gathered.

Ivermectin doesn’t kill parasites; it cures parasitic diseases by disrupting the parasites’ reproducti­on. “In treating parasites, one of the things that makes Ivermectin so wonderful is that it can be given at extremely low doses, so it’s very safe and well tolerated,” Lowe said.

That doesn’t appear to be the case in test-tube studies against viruses. There, the drug looks like it works only at a high enough dose to trigger a mechanism called phospholip­idosis — a process Lowe compared to killing things with detergent. That prevents viruses getting into cells, but it’s also extremely toxic to people.

So what would explain the positive conclusion­s of the new meta-analysis, published in the American Journal of Therapeuti­cs? In the numerous clinical studies analyzed, it was given in low enough doses not to kill people. Lowe said he is skeptical because the strongest, bestrun studies showed nothing and only the weakest ones seemed to show any effect. Ivermectin’s owner, Merck, has delivered a skeptical assessment of its usefulness against COVID-19 similar to Lowe’s.

Several larger, more definitive trials are underway, so there’s still a chance it will work. And that’s worth doing, as long as people don’t bank too much hope on it.

Anecdotes of Ivermectin COVID miracles abound for the same reason that people believe in cures for the common cold: Most people get better on their own and then attribute their recovery to a drug. Even with the much more dangerous COVID-19, people tend to overestima­te their odds of dying and imagine that anything they took must be responsibl­e for their recovery. But what actually saved them was the human immune system — which in most cases works and, with more widespread vaccinatio­n, will work even better.

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