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Ivermectin for COVID-19: Worth a Shot? Researchers from Monash University in Australia showed that ivermectin could inhibit SARS-CoV-2 in cell cultures, spurring a wave of enthusiasm to repurpose the drug as an antiviral
Med Page Today ^ | 08/29/2020 | by Elizabeth Hlavinka,

Posted on 08/29/2020 9:34:18 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Ivermectin, an antiparasitic used to treat river blindness, is being prescribed off-label to treat COVID-19 in some parts of the world, but regulatory agencies are recommending that randomized controlled trials be conducted before widespread use is adopted.

On April 3, researchers from Monash University in Australia showed that ivermectin could inhibit SARS-CoV-2 in cell cultures, spurring a wave of enthusiasm to repurpose the drug as an antiviral at a time when few alternatives were available. Although the concentration of ivermectin used in vitro was far greater than physiological levels in human clinical use, the positive findings were quickly circulated and have since been cited in more than 450 publications.

Some physicians, citing that study, have already begun integrating the off-label use of ivermectin into their COVID-19 treatment protocol, and in Peru and Bolivia, the ministries of health formally authorized the drug for this indication. Although the drug is relatively safe, some scientists are worried that clinicians are putting the cart before the horse in prescribing ivermectin for COVID-19.

"The pandemic creates a sense of urgency and we tend to cut some corners, and that can be okay, but you don't cut all corners," said Carlos Chaccour, MD, PhD, of the Barcelona Institute for Global Health in Spain, who studies ivermectin in the context of tropical disease.

"There needs to be scientific rigor. People may say, 'What do you have to lose? It's a safe drug,' but no drug is free from side effects," he said.

Although the mechanism by which ivermectin acts as an antiviral is unknown, it has also inhibited viral replication with other RNA viruses, including dengue virus and Zika virus.

Ivermectin can lead to gastrointestinal side effects or skin rash, and can be neurotoxic in rare circumstances. In a May 1 post from the FDA, the agency said using the drug to prevent or treat COVID-19 "should be avoided" in the absence of clinical trials.

The agency also issued a warning letter 1 week after the in vitro study was published cautioning against the use of the veterinary formulation of ivermectin. Presumably, the letter was intended to protect the public against misinformation, after a man died in March from consuming chloroquine phosphate, an aquarium cleaner, when hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) was making headlines.

In Peru, the demand for the drug surged after its authorization, leading some to turn to the veterinary formulation of the drug, which is used to treat heartworm and can cause serious harm in humans.

"FDA is concerned about the health of consumers who may self-medicate by taking ivermectin products intended for animals, thinking they can be a substitute for ivermectin intended for humans," the agency stated. "People should never take animal drugs, as the FDA has only evaluated their safety and effectiveness in the particular animal species for which they are labeled."

However, in doses used off-label for scabies, for example, ivermectin has a low side-effect profile. Without many alternatives available, some physicians forged ahead of formal trials and began to prescribe it for COVID-19.

Positive Signal in Florida

Jean-Jacques Rajter, MD, a pulmonary care physician at Broward Health Medical Center in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, started using ivermectin to treat COVID-19 in critical patients after seeing the promising findings of the in vitro study back in April.

"At the time, dexamethasone, remdesivir, and convalescent plasma were not really on the market or were inaccessible because not enough people had recovered," Rajter told MedPage Today. "There was nothing else."

Rajter said he treated 15-20 patients over the latter half of April with a standard scabies dose of ivermectin and had a markedly high success rate. Soon after, colleagues at Broward Health also began prescribing ivermectin, and Rajter and his wife and partner, Juliana Cepelowicz Rajter, MD, co-authored a retrospective, preprint, study of 280 patients, published in June.

In the study, which was not peer-reviewed, ivermectin was associated with a survival benefit among patients with severe COVID-19 compared with usual care. The association remained after adjusting for differences between groups, including the use of azithromycin, hydroxychloroquine, and zinc, which was common.

"When this was released in preprint, other investigators across the world took notice in Peru, Brazil, Colombia, Bangladesh, Mexico, and Iraq," Jean-Jacques Rajter said. "The success story we had in early April has been duplicated in other smaller studies across the world."

Trials conducted in Iraq, Bangladesh, and Mexico have shown positive results with ivermectin. But the studies in Bangladesh and Mexico lacked a control arm, and the study in Iraq treated only 16 patients with ivermectin.

Matthew Spinelli, MD, of the University of California, San Francisco, told MedPage Today in an email that positive anecdotal reports are "difficult to interpret given that most patients who are infected will get better on their own, and the clinical manifestations are so variable for COVID-19."

The Next HCQ?

Parallels have been drawn with ivermectin and HCQ: Both reduced viral load in vitro and produced a signal that led to their being prescribed under compassionate use, said Zeno Bisoffi, MD, PhD, of the University of Verona in Italy.

"There were some results from observational studies claiming that [hydroxychloroquine] worked, but in fact they were small studies with very heavy methodological flaws," Bisoffi told MedPage Today. "Nevertheless, they were cited everywhere, so most clinicians around the world were using hydroxychloroquine with no evidence."

"This is a mistake we want to avoid with ivermectin," Bisoffi said.

Both drugs were also caught up in the notorious Surgisphere Corp. scandal. In late May, flawed data from the shadowy company were used in a since-retracted Lancet study to demonstrate a survival benefit with HCQ.

A lesser-known preprint study of 169 hospitals around the world also used Surgisphere data to demonstrate that ivermectin reduced the need for mechanical ventilation and death. As with the HCQ study, the scientific community identified discrepancies in Surgisphere's ivermectin data, and the paper was withdrawn -- but not before it was downloaded more than 15,000 times.

The paper influenced policy decisions in Latin America and was cited in a white paper advocating for ivermectin to be included in Peruvian treatment guidelines.

Positive findings from another study in India are also being evaluated by the country's medical review board, The Print reported. In Australia, a widely known gastroenterologist who repurposes drugs, Thomas Borody, MD, PhD, director of the Centre for Digestive Diseases in Sydney, Australia, endorsed ivermectin as one part of a triple-drug therapy, along with doxycycline and zinc, for outpatient COVID-19 cases.

"Ivermectin has been used in billions of prescriptions to date, and even with high dosing there are very few side effects when used for things like scabies," Borody told MedPage Today. "This thing in combination of the three works so well, I believe it is the way we should go."

A Call for More Research

While ICU physicians may see ivermectin as something worth trying, others believe the evidence is still too scant.

The drug should not be written off, but neither is it ready for widespread clinical use, Chaccour said. For example, it is still unclear whether it is safe to use in the context of a highly inflammatory syndrome, like COVID-19, or in combination with other drugs, he said.

Rajter said he initially used ivermectin as a "measure of desperation." But now that he has seen positive results in his hospital network, he is frustrated by an intentionally slow review process.

Certain drugs are expedited by the FDA, while "other treatments which have been shown to be quite effective -- like ivermectin -- have not seen the light of day," Rajter said.

Currently, there are more than 30 clinical trials testing ivermectin for COVID-19. Bisoffi is investigating high doses of ivermectin for mild infection and Chaccour is also conducting a trial in Spain. A team at Johns Hopkins University is comparing ivermectin versus bicalutamide and usual care among hospitalized COVID-19 patients.

Whether ivermectin passes the test in a randomized controlled setting remains to be seen, but scientists seem to agree that ivermectin warrants at least that.

"It's a shame that so few randomized controlled trials have been performed in the U.S. on potential treatments such as this one," Spinelli said.

Last Updated August 28, 2020


TOPICS: Health/Medicine; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: australia; coronavirus; covid; covid19; ivermectin; monashuniversity
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1 posted on 08/29/2020 9:34:18 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: Mrs. Don-o; tellw; Huskrrrr; Jane Long; Freedom'sWorthIt; Freedom56v2; BDParrish; Phx_RC

Ping in relation to Hydroxychloroquine


2 posted on 08/29/2020 9:35:05 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
A Call for More Research

Of course. Meanwhile shut 'er down tight as a drum - the economy I mean.

3 posted on 08/29/2020 9:44:59 AM PDT by AndyJackson
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To: SeekAndFind

Ivermectin for COVID-19: Worth a Shot? Researchers from Monash University in Australia showed that ivermectin could inhibit SARS-CoV-2

Could?

How about getting back to us when it says DOES.


4 posted on 08/29/2020 10:01:53 AM PDT by Deo et patriae (Make America Great again! rantings.)
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To: SeekAndFind

WOW! Trump may even get a vaccine for all known virus’, from this Dem-panic! (semi-sarcastic)


5 posted on 08/29/2020 10:09:40 AM PDT by TribalPrincess2U (0bama's agenda�Divide and conquer seems to be working.?)
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To: SeekAndFind

OK. Sounds great.

Or, you could just go with what works, which is HCQ/zinc.

There’s always that.


6 posted on 08/29/2020 10:09:48 AM PDT by marron
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To: SeekAndFind

The Ivermectin “Triple therapy protocol” has been in use very successfully in Australia for a bit now.

The guy championing it is no lightweight.

https://au.finance.yahoo.com/news/ivermectin-triple-therapy-protocol-covid-030000687.html

This article also bags on HCQ which is and has been shown to reduce mortality in Belgium and other significant studies. Anyone claiming it doesn’t work is politically motivated.


7 posted on 08/29/2020 10:16:07 AM PDT by Malsua
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To: Malsua

The triple therapy is a more refined therapy and in my judgment will probably replace HCQ/Azi if honest trials were held. The science behind it is solid. In a real world, HCQ and AZI would have been used widely as an early treatment in the pandemic pending new and better science — in my judgment, this is new and better.


8 posted on 08/29/2020 10:21:01 AM PDT by gas_dr (Trial lawyers AND POLITICIANS are Endangering Every Patient in America: INCLUDING THEIR LIBERTIES)
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To: gas_dr

Even Dr. Vladimir Zelenko, the doctor who made Hydroxychloroquine well known in the USA, is now incorporating Ivermectin in his treatments against CoVid-19.


9 posted on 08/29/2020 10:24:51 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

This was first discussed here 2-3 months ago.


10 posted on 08/29/2020 10:25:18 AM PDT by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: SeekAndFind

You can pick it up at the local vet supply. Horses like the Apple flavor, but you won’t need the whole tube, that’s the horse size dose. It works great on worms.


11 posted on 08/29/2020 10:26:37 AM PDT by centurion316
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To: Deo et patriae

Meanwhile keep lying about HCQ and letting people die needlessly. These people need to know we see right through them. THEY LIE!


12 posted on 08/29/2020 10:29:22 AM PDT by precisionshootist (ui)
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To: SeekAndFind

How long before Fauci declares the study “flawed” and the FDA bans the drug as “dangerous”?


13 posted on 08/29/2020 10:29:41 AM PDT by Steve_Seattle
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To: SeekAndFind

Plus, those treated with it don’t have worms afterward!


14 posted on 08/29/2020 10:33:27 AM PDT by 17th Miss Regt
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To: Deo et patriae

“Could?

How about getting back to us when it says DOES.”

Could, as in “was able to.”

Poor writing.


15 posted on 08/29/2020 10:33:37 AM PDT by ifinnegan (Democrats kill babies and harvest their organs to sell)
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To: Deo et patriae

RE: How about getting back to us when it says DOES.

SEE HERE:

https://nypost.com/2020/08/09/is-there-a-cure-for-anti-trump-disease-devine/

Clinical trials on his ivermectin triple therapy are about to start in California and are underway in 32 other countries.

But results using the drug off-label have been promising.

In Bangladesh, 400 patients with mild to moderate symptoms were treated and 98 percent cleared the virus within four to 14 days.

In the Dominican Republic, in 1,300 patients the average duration of infection fell from 21 days to 10 days.

And in sick patients at Broward County Medical Center in Florida, mortality fell by 48 percent.

The results have been so remarkable that the government of the most populous Indian state, Uttar Pradesh, approved the use of ivermectin for COVID-19 patients and as a prophylactic for front-line workers.

But Borody has not been able to find a drug company interested in paying for clinical trials for a cheap drug that won’t reap them profits.


16 posted on 08/29/2020 10:46:30 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: centurion316

RE: You can pick it up at the local vet supply. Horses like the Apple flavor, but you won’t need the whole tube, that’s the horse size dose. It works great on worms.

I Would not try it without competent doctor’s supervision.


17 posted on 08/29/2020 10:50:18 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: centurion316

yup, getting the right dose is important.


18 posted on 08/29/2020 11:14:20 AM PDT by Secret Agent Man (Gone Galt; Not Averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Ivermectin AKA canine heart worm preventative ...


19 posted on 08/29/2020 11:44:03 AM PDT by SecondAmendment (This just proves my latest theory ... LEFTISTS RUIN EVERYTHING)
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To: SeekAndFind
I Would not try it without competent doctor’s supervision.

What? You would take medical advice from some anonymous dude on the internet, who is advocating horse medication? What is wrong with you? Most of the country are listening to some dude on MSNBC, CNN, ABC, or Fox News and following their advice to the letter.

20 posted on 08/29/2020 12:04:19 PM PDT by centurion316
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