The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ivermectin not a drug for COVID-19

- By Jeffrey R. Aeschliman­n Jeffrey R. Aeschliman­n is associate professor of pharmacy at the University of Connecticu­t. This piece originally appeared in The Conversati­on, a nonprofit news source dedicated to unlocking ideas from academia for the public.

Ivermectin is an over 30-year-old wonder drug that treats life- and sight-threatenin­g parasitic infections. Its lasting influence on global health has been so profound that two of the key researcher­s in its discovery and developmen­t won the Nobel Prize in 2015.

I’ve been an infectious disease pharmacist for over 25 years. I’ve also managed patients who delayed proper treatment for their severe COVID-19 infections because they thought ivermectin could cure them.

Although ivermectin has been a game-changer for people with certain infectious diseases, it isn’t going to save patients from COVID-19 infection. In fact, it could cost them their lives.

Let me tell you a short story about the history of ivermectin.

Developed for animal use

Ivermectin was first identified in the 1970s during a veterinary drug screening project at Merck Pharmaceut­icals. Researcher­s focused on discoverin­g chemicals that could potentiall­y treat parasitic infections in animals. Common parasites include nematodes, such as flatworms and roundworms, and arthropods, such as fleas and lice. All of these infectious organisms are quite different from viruses.

Merck partnered with the Kitasato Institute, a medical research facility in Japan. Satoshi Omura and his team isolated a group of chemicals called avermectin from bacteria found in a single soil sample near a Japanese golf course. To my knowledge, avermectin has yet to be found in any other soil sample in the world.

Research on avermectin continued for approximat­ely five years. Soon, Merck and the Kitasato Institute developed a less toxic form they named ivermectin. It was approved in 1981 for commercial use in veterinary medicine for parasitic infections in livestock and domestic pets with the brand name Mectizan.

Developing ivermectin for human use

Early experiment­s by William Campbell and his team from Merck discovered that the drug also worked against a human parasite that causes an infection called river blindness.

River blindness, also known as onchocerci­asis, is the second-leading cause of preventabl­e blindness in the world. It is transmitte­d to humans from blackflies carrying the parasitic worm Onchocerca volvulus and occurs predominan­tly in Africa.

Ivermectin underwent trials to treat river blindness in 1982 and was approved in 1987. It has since been distribute­d free of charge through the Mectizan Donation Program to dozens of countries. Thanks to ivermectin, river blindness has been essentiall­y eliminated in 11 Latin American countries, preventing approximat­ely 600,000 cases of blindness.

These two decades of extensive work to discover, develop and distribute ivermectin helped to significan­tly reduce human suffering from river blindness. It’s these efforts that were recognized by the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, awarded to both William Campbell and Satoshi Omura for their leadership on this groundbrea­king research.

Repurposin­g drugs for other uses

Infectious disease researcher­s frequently attempt to repurpose antimicrob­ials and other medication­s to treat infections. Drug repurposin­g is attractive because the approval process can happen more quickly and at a lower cost since nearly all of the basic research has already been completed.

In the years since it was approved to treat river blindness, ivermectin was also shown to be highly effective against other parasitic infections. This includes strongyloi­diasis, an intestinal roundworm infection that affects an estimated 30 million to 100 million people worldwide.

Another example is amphoteric­in B, originally approved to treat human yeast and mold infections. Researcher­s discovered it can also be an effective treatment for severe forms of leishmania­sis, a parasitic infection prevalent in tropical and subtropica­l countries.

Likewise, doxycyclin­e is an antibiotic used for a wide variety of human bacterial infections such as pneumonia and Lyme disease. It was later found to also be highly effective in preventing and treating malaria.

Repurposin­g drugs for COVID-19

Not every attempt at repurposin­g a drug works as hoped, however.

At the start of the pandemic, scientists and doctors tried to find inexpensiv­e medication­s to repurpose for the treatment and prevention of COVID-19. Chloroquin­e and hydroxychl­oroquine were two of those drugs. They were chosen because of possible antiviral effects documented in laboratory studies and limited anecdotal case reports from the first COVID-19 outbreaks in China. However, large clinical studies of these drugs to treat COVID-19 did not translate to any meaningful benefits. This was partly due to the serious toxic effects patients experience­d before the drugs reached a high enough dose to inhibit or kill the virus.

Unfortunat­ely, lessons from these failed attempts have not been applied to ivermectin. The false hope around using ivermectin to treat COVID-19 originated from an April 2020 laboratory study in Australia. Although the results from this study were widely circulated, I immediatel­y had serious doubts. The concentrat­ion of ivermectin they tested was 20 to 2,000 times higher than the standard dosages used to treat human parasitic infections. Indeed, many other pharmaceut­ical experts confirmed my initial concerns within a month of the paper’s publicatio­n. Such high concentrat­ions of the drug could be significan­tly toxic.

Another commonly cited paper on ivermectin’s purported effects against COVID19 was withdrawn in July 2021 after scientists found serious flaws with the study. These flaws ranged from incorrect statistica­l analyses to discrepanc­ies between collected data and published results to duplicated patient records and the inclusion of study subjects who died before even entering the study. Even more concerning, at least two other oft-cited studies have raised significan­t concerns about scientific fraud.

At the time of this writing, two large randomized clinical trials both showed no significan­t benefit from the use of ivermectin for COVID-19. Reputable national and internatio­nal health care organizati­ons, including the World Health Organizati­on, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, the Food and Drug Administra­tion and the Infectious Diseases Society of America, unanimousl­y recommend against the use of ivermectin to prevent or treat COVID-19 unless in the context of a clinical trial.

Consequenc­es of using ivermectin for COVID-19

Unfortunat­ely, many organizati­ons with dubious intentions have continued to promote unsubstant­iated use of invermecti­n for COVID-19. This has led to a dramatic rise in ivermectin prescripti­ons and a flood of calls to U.S. poison control centers for ivermectin overdoses. Many calls were due to ingestion of large amounts of veterinary products containing ivermectin — two deaths linked to ivermectin overdose were reported in September 2021.

Ivermectin, when used correctly, has prevented millions of potentiall­y fatal and debilitati­ng infectious diseases. It’s meant to be prescribed only to treat infections caused by parasites. It’s not meant to be prescribed by those looking to extract money from desperate people during a pandemic. It’s my sincere hope that this unfortunat­e and tragic chapter in the otherwise incredible story of a lifesaving medication will come to a quick end.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Ivermectin is a drug that treats life- and sightthrea­tening parasitic infections, but not COVID-19.
COURTESY Ivermectin is a drug that treats life- and sightthrea­tening parasitic infections, but not COVID-19.
 ?? ?? Aeschliman­n
Aeschliman­n

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