Vice President M Venkaiah Naidu being screened in Parliament | Shekhar Yadav 
India

Combo drugs used on COVID patients

Combination of drugs given for HIV, malaria and flu being used to treat those with complications

Sumi Sukanya Dutta

NEW DELHI: As the number of coronavirus patients in India is surging, those developing serious complications are being given a combination of anti-HIV, anti-malaria drugs and Tamiflu-an antiviral drug while most patients are just being managed with antipyretics, this newspaper has learnt. So far, at least 6 patients — in Jaipur, Gurugram and Delhi — who have developed severe pneumonia and other complications due to the infection have been given the repurposed drugs and at least two of them are still not out of danger, sources said.

A doctor treating some of these patients in the capital said while the Central Drug Standards Control Organisation had approved Lopinavir and Ritonavir, a fixed dose combination used in HIV patients, for corona cases, the clinicians are also resorting to other drugs that have shown some degree of efficacy against the virus elsewhere. “Many doctors are watching for signs of deterioration in patients and then using multiple drugs hoping at least one works,” said a senior doctor.

Dr Dhruva Chaudhry, president of the Indian Society for Critically Care Medicine, who is working with the government on treatment guidance for clinicians, said anti-retroviral drugs are showing some efficacy against the infection too, but there is no largescale study or randomised control trial to show in what percentage of complicated cases do they work.

In severe cases, COVID-19 can be complicated by acute respiratory disease syndrome, sepsis and septic shock, multiorgan failure, including acute kidney injury and cardiac injury. Older age and co-morbid disease have been reported as risk factors for death.

“It is the latter category of people that we are worried about because mild cases can just be monitored and treated with paracetamol,” said Dr Chaudhry. The ICMR, in its guidelines on clinical management of coronavirus patients, has said anti-retroviral drug therapy be started in patients when organ dysfunction sets in. But won’t that be too late? “Nobody knows answer to that, but the side effects of anti-HIV drugs are major and therefore it can’t be used indiscriminately,” said a doctor adding that a more targeted drug was the only hope. 

US Supreme Court boosts Trump's power to fire officials, but protects Fed

Centre lifts curbs on petrol, diesel sales to commercial buyers from July 1

Malayalam cinema’s AMMA: Chronicle of a crisis-ridden body

Congress claims SBI had sought removal of officials posted at Ram Temple's donation counting centre three months ago

Delhi EV policy can set benchmark for rest of India, say industry leaders; gig workers seek safeguards

SCROLL FOR NEXT