Why we’re still arguing about hydroxychloroquine

Contact Your Elected Officials

The battle over hydroxychloroquine began as a kind of trivial but apparently earnest and hopeful celebrity endorsement of the drug (the celebrity being President Trump). It has devolved into a real political and public-discourse horror show.

Perpetual back-and-forths between those prominent doctors who do not believe in the drugโ€™s effectiveness โ€” coronavirus task force members Anthony Fauci and Brett Giroir are two โ€” and dissident, lesser-known doctors, such as Harvey Risch of Yale University, have given birth to serious questions about how truly scientific the whole conversation has been.

Can hydroxychloroquine be used effectively to treat COVID-19? The most prominent voices say no, citing several randomized controlled trials, but others say it is, citing their own clinical evidence.

The question that nobody seems to be asking is, what is the standard of evidence required for granting emergency use authorizations, or EUAs, for drugs in the first place? And what are the limits of various kinds of clinical trials?

The Food and Drug Administration approved an EUA for use of hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine in hospitalized patients on March 28. Importantly, for the purpose of reinforcing distinct categories, its authorization was for a targeted use: hospitalized patients. When the FDA authorized the drug, there was no significant evidence of effectiveness from randomized controlled trials, or RCTs.

In a March 28 letter on authorization, FDA Chief Scientist Denise Hinton wrote, โ€œBased upon limited in-vitro and anecdotal clinical data in case series, chloroquine phosphate and hydroxychloroquine sulfate are currently recommended for treatment of hospitalized COVID-19 patients in several countries โ€ฆ FDA is issuing this EUA to facilitate the availability of chloroquine phosphate and hydroxychloroquine sulfate during the COVID-19 pandemic to treat patients for whom a clinical trial is not available, or participation is not feasible.โ€

The letter suggests that randomized controlled trials are not the โ€œgold standardโ€ for authorizing an EUA. If they were, the March 28 EUA would not have gone through. RCTs do not appear to be the gold standard in other circumstances of drug approval, either. On July 31, the FDA granted accelerated approval of a cancer medication absent any randomized controlled trial.

Moreover, once the treatments and the trials began, researchers in the most notable studies followed those who the EUA had authorized for treatment, namely hospitalized patients. The FDA has since revoked its authorization of hydroxychloroquine on the basis of those various trials, determining no real effectiveness and even suggesting it is considerably dangerous.

These contextual points, along with a score of clinical evidence, are among the reasons that Risch, a professor of epidemiology at Yale School of Public Health, has argued in favor of using hydroxychloroquine to treat high-risk outpatients early in their disease.

To the evidence, Risch argues that doctors have offered more than enough evidence of hydroxychloroquineโ€™s effectiveness for outpatient use in high-risk patients. To the authorization, the FDA does not need randomized controlled trials to issue an emergency use authorization. It could do so for outpatient use of hydroxychloroquine, and Risch says the evidence is there.

โ€œWeโ€™ve been saying that the people to look at are the ones you have to treat,โ€ Risch said in an interview with the Washington Examiner. โ€œWeโ€™re talking about outpatient, high-risk treatment, and thatโ€™s it.โ€

Risch has emerged as a loud voice in favor of using the drug specifically for that category of patients, so loud and contrarian, in fact, that 25 fellow faculty signed on to a stinging rebuke of his advocacy for a targeted use of the drug.

Risch cites the clinical findings of doctors such as Vladimir Zelenko, a New York physician who has demonstrated success in treating high-risk outpatients with hydroxychloroquine, zinc, and azithromycin. He cites other evidence showing success in high-risk outpatients in Brazil and France, including reduced risk of hospitalization. Risch discusses these studies in a recent Newsweek op-ed (See PDF Below) and in a paper he wrote for the American Journal of Epidemiology (See PDF Below).

These findings, he argues, demonstrate evidence even stronger than a โ€œmay be effectiveโ€ standard, justifying an EUA for outpatient use. โ€œThe FDA canโ€™t go up to a doctor and say, โ€˜You havenโ€™t seen what youโ€™ve seen,โ€™โ€ he said.

by Jeremy Beaman, Commentary Fellow

Read Original Article on Washington Examiner

The Key to Defeating COVID-19 Already Exists. We Need to Start Using It

The-Key-to-Defeating-COVID

Opinion: Early Outpatient Treatment of Symptomatic, High-Risk Covid-19 Patients that Should be Ramped-Up Immediately as Key to the Pandemic Crisis

Early-Outpatient-Treatment-of-Symptomatic-High-Risk-Covid-19-Patients

COVID-19 Treatment – Global HCQ/CQ Studies https://c19study.com/

c19study01-27-2021

The Thinking Conservative
The Thinking Conservativehttps://www.thethinkingconservative.com/
The goal of THE THINKING CONSERVATIVE is to help us educate ourselves on conservative topics of importance to our freedom and our pursuit of happiness. We do this by sharing conservative opinions on all kinds of subjects, from all types of people, and all kinds of media, in a way that will challenge our perceptions and help us to make educated choices.

Common Sense Economics and Finance: Value Established for the American Republic

A infection has mutated federal finance into a condition of political inflation, and valueless FED money is proof that the Federal Reserve is the root cause of that condition.

Pastor Corey Brooks is Walking Across America!

Last night I got to fulfill a bucket list item. I got to meet one of my personal heroes of our time (after Donald Trump) Pastor Corey Brooks.

Is Japan About to Be Gifted With Our Greatest Strengthโ„ข?

Japan sees little resistance to new immigrants, but policies provide inadequate support to integrate them into Japanese economy and society.

Cracker Barrelโ€™s Remake Proves Lefty Women Unfit to Lead

โ€œThe customer is always rightโ€ remains true today regardless of whether people like Cracker Barrel CEO Julie Masino opt to respect it and follow it or not.

Walmart on Its Radioactive Shrimp: โ€˜The Health and Safety of Our Customers Is Always a Top Priority’

โ€œNowadays people know the price of everything and the...

California Parole Board Denies Parole for Erik Menendez

CA Board of Parole Hearings rejected the release of Erik Menendez, one of the two brothers convicted in the 1989 killing of their parents in Southern CA.

Intel Has Agreed to Give US Government 10 Percent Stake: Trump

The White House had been seeking an equity stake in the company in exchange for the almost $11 billion in grants from the CHIPS and Science Act.

FBI Searches Home of Former National Security Adviser John Bolton: Reports

FBI searched Maryland home of John Bolton, former national security adviser under President Trump, as part of a classified documents investigation.

5 Takeaways From Fed Chair Powellโ€™s Final Jackson Hole Speech

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell presented his final keynote address at the central bankโ€™s annual Jackson Hole summit on Aug. 22.

Trumpโ€™s Tariffs Will Reduce Deficits by $4 Trillion Over Next Decade, Says CBO Report

A report released by the CBO predicted that President Donald Trumpโ€™s tariffs will reduce federal deficits by around $4 trillion over the next decade.

USDA Issues Memorandum Prioritizing American Energy on National Forest Lands

Secretary Rollins said that the United States will no longer allow foreign-made solar panels or inefficient energy projects to undermine national security.

US Pauses Visas for Commercial Truck Drivers, Citing Safety and Other Impacts

The Trump administration will immediately pause the issuance of all worker visas for commercial truck drivers, Sec of State Marco Rubio said.

Chip Stocks Fall on Reports White House Seeking Equity in Exchange for Grants

Share prices of semiconductor companies fell following reports the Trump admin is considering taking equity stakes in exchange for federal funding.
spot_img

Related Articles