Fauci says leak concerns fueled his White House revelation of Gilead
drug results
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[April 30, 2020]
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Concerns over leaks
compelled the top U.S. infectious disease official to reveal data on
Gilead Sciences Inc’s experimental drug remdesivir, the first in a
scientifically rigorous clinical trial to show benefit in treating
COVID-19.
The dramatic announcement by Dr Anthony Fauci in the Oval Office on
Wednesday prompted concerns among scientists that the Trump
administration was raising hopes about a coronavirus treatment before
sharing the full data with researchers.
As a cautionary example of inflating the potential value of a therapy,
some pointed to President Donald Trump’s repeated endorsements of
malaria drug hydroxychloroquine as a treatment, with no evidence that it
works.
Newer data suggests the malaria treatments may carry significant risks
for some sufferers of the respiratory disease caused by the virus.
Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID), which is running the trial, said he took the first
opportunity to get the word out that patients taking a dummy treatment
or placebo should be switched to remdesivir in hopes of benefiting from
it.
He expressed concern that leaks of partial information would lead to
confusion. Since the White House was not planning a daily virus
briefing, Fauci said he was invited to release the news at a news
conference with Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards(D). "It was purely
driven by ethical concerns," Fauci told Reuters in a telephone
interview.
"I would love to wait to present it at a scientific meeting, but it's
just not in the cards when you have a situation where the ethical
concern about getting the drug to people on placebo dominates the
conversation."
An independent data safety and monitoring board, which had looked at the
preliminary results of the NIAID trial, determined it had met its
primary goal of reducing hospital stays.
On Tuesday evening, that information was conveyed in a conference call
to scientists studying the drug globally.
"There are literally dozens and dozens of investigators around the
world," Fauci said. "People were starting to leak it." But he did not
give details of where the unreported data was being shared.
Several scientists interviewed by Reuters felt the White House setting
seemed inappropriate for the release of highly anticipated
government-funded trial data on the Gilead therapy.
They had expected it to be presented simultaneously in a detailed news
release, a briefing at a medical meeting or in a scientific journal,
allowing researchers to review the data.
Information from various trials of remdesivir has been leaked to media
in recent weeks. In a statement on Wednesday, Gilead said the NIAID's
much anticipated trial had met its primary goal, but gave no details.
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National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Dr.
Anthony Fauci attends a coronavirus response meeting between U.S.
President Donald Trump and Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards in
the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, U.S., April 29,
2020. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
Data in a separate NIAID statement after Fauci spoke detailed
preliminary results showing that patients who got the drug had a 31
percent faster time to recovery than those who got a placebo,
cutting hospital stays by four days.
The trial also came close to showing the drug helped people survive
the disease, but the data fell just short of statistical
significance.
"I want to see the full data. I want to understand the statistics. I
want to understand the benefit and risk. I want to understand the
structure of the study, and all of it," said Dr. Steven Nissen, the
chief academic officer at the Cleveland Clinic.
"Am I encouraged from what I've heard? Yes, I'm encouraged. But I
want to get a full understanding of what happened here, and not get
it via a photo opportunity from the Oval Office."
Data Gilead released on its own trial of remdesivir drew less
attention, as it did not compare outcomes between those receiving
therapy and those who did not.
Results from a third study in China suggesting remdesivir failed to
help COVID-19 patients were released in the British medical journal
the Lancet after review by a peer group of scientists.
"That's the only thing I'll hang my hat on, and that was negative,"
said Dr. Eric Topol, director and founder of the Scripps Research
Translational Institute in La Jolla, California.
He was unimpressed by remdesivir’s modest benefit.
"It was expected to be a whopping effect," Topol added. "It clearly
does not have that."
At the Oval Office news conference, Fauci compared the study
findings to AZT, the first drug to show any benefit against HIV,
decades ago.
"We know that was an imperfect drug. It was the first step," Fauci
said in the interview.
"Similar to AZT, it's (remdesivir) the first baby step towards what
hopefully will be a number of better drugs that will come in and be
able to treat people with COVID-19."
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Michele Gershberg and
Clarence Fernandez)
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