Exclusive: In Russia, a black market for HIV drug to try on coronavirus
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[April 20, 2020]
By Polina Ivanova
MOSCOW (Reuters) - A black market has developed in Russia for an
antiviral HIV drug explored as a possible treatment for COVID-19, the
respiratory disease caused by the new coronavirus, according to sellers,
HIV activists and the head of the drug's main Russian producer.
More than 20 trials around the world are testing Kaletra as a COVID-19
treatment or post-exposure prophylaxis.
Russia's Health Ministry recommended it as a possible treatment for
COVID-19 at the end of January after reports from China that it was
beneficial, but later added that its efficacy was uncertain.
That did not deter speculators who bet that shortages of the drug, also
produced as a generic in Russia under the name Kalidavir, might arise as
the coronavirus spread.
"Three months ago, people were buying Kaletra from us without much
enthusiasm for 900 roubles ($12) a box," one online trader of HIV drugs
said.
"Now, anticipating (supply) interruptions, people are buying between 100
and 700 boxes from us, at 3,800 roubles a box. Mainly, people are buying
(Kaletra) with the aim of reselling it for a very high price."
Resellers can get 7,000-8,000 roubles per box, the trader said - and
that frenzy is worrying some HIV-positive people.
The number of new coronavirus cases in Russia began rising sharply this
month, and on Monday it reported a daily rise of 4,268 cases, bringing
the nationwide tally to 47,121.
Kaletra, as with many other prescription-only HIV treatments in Russia,
is purchased in bulk by the government and distributed to registered HIV
patients for free.
But interruptions in supplies of these drugs are not uncommon, so many
top up their stocks privately, from pharmacies. People who do not have a
Russian passport and others who prefer to stay out of the official
system for various reasons also rely on private supplies.
'120 CALLS A DAY'
The director of H-Clinic in St. Petersburg, which specialises in
infectious diseases and keeps a stock to cover those needs, said his
pharmacy had been flooded with calls in recent weeks from worried HIV
patients.
"We have a van coming from the pharmaceutical company, and everything in
it has already been claimed in orders," Andrei Skvortsov said. "There
were up to 120 calls a day."
The pharmacy's supplies of the generic, Kalidavir, were stable, he said,
but the distributor of Kaletra had told him the delivery would be the
pharmacy's last because of the need to redirect it for state tenders.
The Health Ministry did not respond to questions about the drug's resale
online or possible shortages.
It first instructed doctors to use Kaletra's combined components,
lopinavir and ritonavir, to treat COVID-19 on Jan. 29, based on studies
of the treatment of other coronaviruses, such as Severe Acute
Respiratory Syndrome (SARS).
Produced in Russia by R-Pharm under a deal with the U.S. drug maker and
patent-holder AbbVie Inc <ABBV.N>, Kaletra is supplied in smaller
quantities to some pharmacies and AIDS clinics.
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Just 34 packs were sold by such pharmacies in March last year,
compared to over 1,500 in March 2020, market research firm Alpharm
said.
One HIV activist in central Russia said speculators were trying to
buy Kaletra from HIV patients, for 3,000 roubles a box.
The activist, who asked to share only his first name, Alexei, runs a
'back-up medicine cabinet' together with a network of patients
across 20 cities, stockpiling leftover drugs to distribute them to
those in need when shortages appear.
BLACK MARKET
"Messages and calls started coming in from people saying they were
ready to purchase these medicines," Alexei said.
"They are resellers and middlemen ... They are ready to buy
everything, down to the last box. We tell them to shove off."
R-Pharm chief executive Alexei Repik said for the first time
instances were being seen of Kaletra being sold illegally in
pharmacies without a prescription.
"It used not to feature at all, because ... the medicine was
previously only needed by HIV patients," he said.
Repik said police had notified R-Pharm at least twice of seizures of
illegally obtained Kaletra.
R-Pharm assists police in tracing the provenance of drugs being sold
illegally, he said, because black market sales of any drug meant
patients who truly needed it were losing out.
Kaletra's side-effects most commonly include stomach upset and
nausea, but it can also lead to liver and heart rhythm problems,
meaning it could be dangerous to self-prescribe, he said.
But Repik did not expect shortages, because R-Pharm was boosting
production to cope with expected demand from doctors prescribing
Kaletra for coronavirus as well as HIV.
"But of course no one can predict the full scale of the epidemic,"
he added.
Chinese doctors in Wuhan, where the new coronavirus originated,
described the drug as beneficial last week although another study
questioned its effectiveness.
Kaletra stops the HIV virus growing and replicating. Repik said it
had been recommended for the new coronavirus based on past
experience with other coronaviruses and preliminary data.
"(But) it is important to understand that, for now, 100% proven
antiviral medicines - medicines that directly attack the (new)
coronavirus specifically - they don't exist, because studies are
still ongoing."
(Additional reporting by Polina Nikolskaya; Writing by Polina
Ivanova; Editing by Andrew Osborn and Kevin Liffey)
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