USA TODAY International Edition

Trump taking contested drug treatment

FDA: For COVID, don’t use hydroxychl­oroquine

- Courtney Subramania­n and John Fritze

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump said Monday he is taking hydroxychl­oroquine, an anti- malaria drug that he’s repeatedly touted as a treatment for coronaviru­s, despite warnings about its effectiveness.

“I happen to be taking it,” Trump said during a roundtable discussion with restaurant executives at the White House. “I hope to not be able to take it soon, you know, because I hope that they come up with some answer. But I think people should be allowed to.”

The Food and Drug Administra­tion has cautioned against the use of hydroxychl­oroquine or chloroquin­e for COVID- 19 treatment outside of hospitals or clinical trials due to the risk of heart rhythm problems.

“Hydroxychl­oroquine and chloroquin­e have not been shown to be safe and effective for treating or preventing COVID- 19,” the FDA warned. Both can cause abnormal heart rhythms and a dangerousl­y rapid heart rate, the statement said.

Trump, who said he has been taking the drug daily for about a week and a half, said that the White House physician “didn’t recommend” the treatment but offered it to him.

Two recent observatio­nal studies of coronaviru­s patients suggested the drug has little impact in treating the disease. The studies, while not the same as a clinical trial, suggested that the drug did not significantly reduce complicati­ons from the virus or death.

Trump told reporters that along with taking the drug, he is being tested for COVID- 19 every couple of days but so far has tested negative.

Trump has also touted remdesivir, an experiment­al antiviral drug developed by American biotech firm Gilead Sciences for Ebola, that was cleared by the FDA to treat patients with the coronaviru­s. Early data from a global study released last month found patients given remdesivir recovered faster and may be less likely to die, but another study found no clinical benefits to the drug.

When asked why he’s taking it, the president said he’s “heard a lot of good stories.”

“And if it’s not good ... I’m not going to get hurt by it. It’s been around for 40 years,” he added.

Hydroxychl­oroquine is FDA- approved to treat or prevent malaria as well as lupus and rheumatoid arthritis.

The FDA has warned consumers not to buy the drug from online pharmacies without a prescripti­on from a health care profession­al.

Clinical trials to test the drugs on COVID- 19 patients are underway.

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