Special Report: As world approaches 10 million coronavirus cases,
doctors see hope in new treatments
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[June 26, 2020]
By Nick Brown, Deena Beasley, Gabriela Mello and Alexander
Cornwell
(Reuters) - Dr. Gopi Patel recalls how
powerless she felt when New York's Mount Sinai Hospital overflowed with
COVID-19 patients in March. Guidance on how to treat the disease was
scant, and medical studies were being performed so hastily they couldn’t
always be trusted. "You felt very helpless,” said Patel, an infectious
disease doctor at the hospital. “I’m standing in front of a patient,
watching them struggle to breathe. What can I give them?”
While there is still no simple answer to that question, a lot has
changed in the six months since an entirely new coronavirus began
sweeping the globe.
Doctors say they’ve learned enough about the highly contagious virus to
solve some key problems for many patients. The changes could be
translating into more saved lives, although there is little conclusive
data.
Nearly 30 doctors around the world, from New Orleans to London to Dubai,
told Reuters they feel more prepared should cases surge again in the
fall.
“We are well-positioned for a second wave,” Patel said. “We know so
much more.”
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Doctors like Patel now have:
*A clearer grasp of the disease’s side effects, like blood clotting and
kidney failure
*A better understanding of how to help patients struggling to breathe
*More information on which drugs work for which kinds of patients.
They also have acquired new tools to aid in the battle, including:
*Widespread testing
*Promising new treatments like convalescent plasma, antiviral drugs and
steroids *An evolving spate of medical research and anecdotal evidence,
which doctors share across institutions, and sometimes across oceans.
Despite a steady rise in COVID-19 cases, driven to some extent by wider
testing, the daily death toll from the disease is falling in some
countries, including the United States. Doctors say they are more
confident in caring for patients than they were in the chaotic first
weeks of the pandemic, when they operated on nothing but blind instinct.
In June, an average of 4,599 people a day died from COVID-19 worldwide,
down from 6,375 a day in April, according to Reuters data.
New York's Northwell Health reported a fatality rate of 21% for COVID-19
patients admitted to its hospitals in March. That rate is now closer to
10%, due to a combination of earlier treatment and improved patient
management, Dr. Thomas McGinn, director of Northwell's Feinstein
Institutes for Medical Research, told Reuters.
"I think everybody is seeing that," he said. "I think people are coming
in sooner, there is better use of blood thinners, and a lot of small
things are adding up."
Even nuts-and-bolts issues, like how to re-organize hospital space to
handle a surge of COVID-19 patients and secure personal protective
equipment (PPE) for medical workers, are not the time-consuming, mad
scrambles they were before.
“The hysteria of who’d take care of (hospital staff) is not there
anymore,” said Dr. Andra Blomkalns, head of emergency medicine at
Stanford Health Care, a California hospital affiliated with Stanford
University. “We have an entire team whose only job is getting PPE.”
To be sure, the world is far from safe from a virus that continues to
rage. It is expected to reach two grim milestones in the next several
days: 10 million confirmed global infections and 500,000 deaths. As of
Thursday evening, more than 9.5 million people had tested positive for
the coronavirus, and more than 483,000 had died, according to Reuters
data. The United States remains the epicenter of the pandemic, and cases
are rising at an alarming pace in states like Arizona, Florida and
Texas.
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There is still no surefire treatment for COVID-19, the disease caused by
the new virus, which often starts as a respiratory illness but can
spread to attack organs including the heart, liver, kidneys or central
nervous system. Scientists are at least months away from a working
vaccine.
And while medical knowledge has improved, doctors continue to emphasize
that the best way for people to survive is to avoid infection in the
first place through good hygiene, face coverings and limited group
interaction.
Dr. Ramanathan Venkiteswaran, medical director of Aster Hospitals in the
United Arab Emirates, said COVID-19 will likely result in permanent
changes in medicine and for the general public on “basic things like
social distancing, wearing of masks and hand washing.”
LEARNING ON THE FLY
In the medical field, change can be slow, with years-long studies often
needed before recommendations are altered. But protocols for COVID-19
have evolved at lightning speed.
In Brazil, São Paulo-based Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, one of
the country’s leading private hospital networks, has updated its
internal guidelines for treating coronavirus patients some 50 times
since the outbreak began earlier this year, according to Dr. Moacyr
Silva Junior, an infectious disease specialist at the center. Those
guidelines govern questions such as which patients are eligible for
which drugs, how to handle patients with breathing problems, and the use
of PPE like masks, gowns and gloves.
“In only three months, a resounding amount of scientific work on
COVID-19 has been published,” he said.
At Stanford Health Care, treatment guidelines changed almost daily in
the early weeks of the pandemic, Blomkalns said. She described a
patchwork approach that began by following guidelines established by the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, then modifying them to
reflect a shortage of resources, and finally adding new measures not
addressed by the CDC, such as how to handle pregnant healthcare workers.
The new coronavirus has been particularly vexing for doctors because of
the many and often unpredictable ways it can manifest. Most people
infected experience only mild flu-like symptoms, but some can develop
severe pneumonia, stroke and neurological disease. Doctors say the
biggest advance so far has been understanding how the disease can put
patients at much higher risk for blood clots. Most recently, doctors
have discovered that blood type might influence how the body reacts to
the virus.
“We developed specific protocols, such as when to start blood thinners,
that are different from what would be done for typical ICU patients,”
said Dr. Jeremy Falk, pulmonary critical care specialist at Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center in Los Angeles.
Around 15% of COVID-19 patients are at risk of becoming sick enough to
require hospitalization. Scientists have estimated that the fatality
rate could be as high as 5%, but most put the number well below 1%.
People with the highest risk of severe disease include older adults and
those with underlying health conditions like heart disease, diabetes and
obesity.
While rates of COVID-19 infection have recently been rising in many
parts of the United States, the total number of U.S. patients
hospitalized with COVID-19 has been steadily falling since a peak in
late April, according to the CDC.
Many hospitals report success with guidelines for "proning" patients -
positioning them on their stomachs to relieve pressure on the lungs, and
hopefully stave off the need for mechanical ventilation, which many
doctors said has done more harm than good.
“At first, we had no idea how to treat severely ill patients when we
(ventilate),” said Dr. Satoru Hashimoto, who directs the intensive care
division at Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine in Japan. “We
treated them in the fashion we treated influenza,” only to see those
patients suffer serious kidney, digestive and other problems, he said.
Hospitals say increased coronavirus testing - and faster turnaround
times to get results - are also making a difference.
"What has really helped us triage patients is the availability of rapid
testing that came on about six weeks ago," said Falk of Cedars-Sinai.
"Initially, we had to wait two, three or even four days to get a test
back. That really clogged up the COVID areas of the hospital."
Faster, wider testing also helps conserve PPE by identifying the
negative patients around whom doctors don’t have to wear as much gear,
said Dr. Saj Patel, who treats non-critical patients at the University
of California San Francisco Medical Center. “You can imagine how much
PPE we burned through” waiting for test results, he said.
Hospitals around the world acted early to restructure operations,
including floor layouts, to isolate coronavirus patients and reduce
exposure to others. It wasn’t always smooth, but doctors say they’re
figuring out how to do it more efficiently.
“Our hospital infrastructure, and the way that we ... manage people
coming through the door is a lot slicker than it was earlier in the
epidemic," said Dr. Tom Wingfield, a clinical lecturer at the Liverpool
School of Tropical Medicine in Liverpool, England.
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A medical staff member is seen next to a patient suffering from the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in the intensive care unit at the
Circolo hospital in Varese, Italy April 9, 2020. REUTERS/Flavio Lo
Scalzo/File Photo
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‘THE PRESIDENT’S DRUG’
Hospitals said some of their early hunches about best treatments for
COVID-19 patients ended up being wrong. Case in point: use of the
anti-malaria pill hydroxychloroquine.
It gained attention in March, when U.S. President Donald Trump began
publicly touting it. Early reports showed the drug could have some
benefit, and hospitals, desperate for solutions, started giving it
to critically sick patients. But subsequent trial data have told a
different story, suggesting the drug is not effective for treatment
or prevention, and might even cause harm. Other clinical trials of
the drug are still underway.
Dr. Mangala Narasimhan, regional director of critical care at
Northwell Hospital in New York, recalled the uncertainty around
hydroxychloroquine. The hospital used it early on, but stopped after
the negative studies were published. “That was one of our mainstays
of treatment in the beginning,” Narasimhan said. “We didn’t have
anything else.”
Trump’s loud support for the drug turned the medical debate into a
political one. That happened in Brazil, too, when far-right
President Jair Bolsonaro fiercely supported hydroxychloroquine.
Hospital Sírio-Libanês, in São Paulo, is one of the many hospitals
around the globe that have now abandoned it.
Some patients at Sírio-Libanês refused to be part of clinical trials
involving what they called the “president’s drug,” said Dr. Mirian
Dal Ben, an epidemiologist there, while others demanded to be
treated with it.
The lingering questions about use of hydroxychloroquine highlight
the hazards of quickly moving science. Hospitals normally rely on
fully vetted research published by prominent medical journals like
the Lancet and the New England Journal of Medicine to flag important
medical findings. But as the pandemic built, so did the number of
so-called "pre-print" studies that have not been peer-reviewed.
The Montpellier University Hospital in southern France used
hydroxychloroquine on severely ill patients until the government
banned the substance in May.
“I have no major regrets when looking back on the decisions that we
took,” said Dr. Jacques Reynes, head of infectious and tropical
diseases. “But I would say that, at the beginning, we were somewhat
in a fog.”
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USING WHAT'S AT HAND
But even if hydroxychloroquine looks unlikely as an effective
COVID-19 treatment, hospitals continue to try new medications - both
by repurposing older drugs and exploring novel therapies. Patients
are being enrolled in hundreds of coronavirus clinical trials
launched in the past three months.
Many hospitals said they are seeing success with the use of plasma
donated by survivors of COVID-19 to treat newly infected patients.
People who survive an infectious disease like COVID-19 are generally
left with blood containing antibodies, which are proteins made by
the body’s immune system to fight off a virus. The blood component
that carries the antibodies, known as convalescent plasma, can be
collected and given to new patients.
Early results from a study at New York's Mount Sinai Hospital found
that patients with severe COVID-19 who were given convalescent
plasma were more likely to stabilize or need less oxygen support
than other similar hospital patients. But results from other studies
have been mixed, and doctors still await findings from a
rigorously-designed trial. And availability of plasma varies between
regions.
At Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, Michigan, “anecdotally everyone
can provide stories” of the benefits of plasma, said Dr. John
Deledda, the hospital’s chief medical officer.
But in rural New Mexico, hospitals that care for largely underserved
populations struggle to find it. “There’s a limited number of blood
centers” that can provide plasma, said Valory Wangler, chief medical
officer at Rehoboth McKinley Christian Health Care Services, in
Gallup, New Mexico. Until trial data is more conclusive, plasma is
“not something we’re pursuing actively,” she said.
Dr Abdullatif al-Khal, head of infectious diseases at Qatar’s Hamad
Medical Corporation and a co-chair of the country’s pandemic
preparedness team, said he saw patients improve after he started
using donated plasma early in the course of COVID-19 before the
patients deteriorated.
Qatar is also assessing a steroid known as dexamethasone to treat
COVID-19. But Khal says he wants to wait for publication of clinical
data behind a recent UK study suggesting that the steroid reduced
death rates by around a third among the most severely ill COVID-19
patients.
In patients with severe COVID-19, the immune system can overreact,
triggering a potentially harmful cascade. Steroids are an older
class of drugs that suppress that inflammatory response. But they
can also make it easier for other viral or bacterial infections to
take hold - making doctors leery of their use in a hospital setting
or in patients with early-stage COVID-19.
Some countries, including Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates,
reported using HIV drugs lopinavir and ritonavir with some success.
Clinical trials, though, have suggested little benefit, and they
aren’t widely used in the United States.
MIDNIGHT DELIVERY
Many of the doctors who spoke with Reuters were bullish on the use
of remdesivir, the only drug so far shown to be effective against
the coronavirus in a rigorous clinical trial. The antiviral
developed by California-based Gilead Sciences Inc <GILD.O> was shown
to reduce the length of hospital stays for COVID-19 patients by
about a third, but hasn’t been proven to boost survival.
Remdesivir is designed to disable the mechanism by which certain
viruses, including the new coronavirus, make copies of themselves
and potentially overwhelm their host’s immune system.
It is available under emergency approvals in several countries,
including the United States. But Gilead's donated supplies are
limited, and distribution and availability are uneven. Dr. Andrew
Staricco, chief medical officer at McLaren Health Care, which
operates 11 hospitals across Michigan, recalls the urgency to obtain
remdesivir early on. He got an email from Michigan’s health
department on May 9, a week after the U.S. Food & Drug
Administration authorized the drug for use in treating COVID-19. The
health department said it had received a small batch from the
federal government, and planned to dole it out to local hospitals
based on need. Staricco wrote back, saying he had 15 to 18
critically ill patients, but was given enough to treat just four.
The drug was so precious, he said, that state police troopers were
responsible for transporting it to the hospital - which they did,
dropping it off around 1 a.m. the next morning. Health officials
originally directed remdesivir for use on the most critically ill
patients. But doctors later found they got the best results
administering it earlier. “We started finding that, actually, the
sooner you get treated with it, the better,” Staricco said. “We’ve
revisited our criteria for giving it to patients three different
times." Data on the drug, he said, is still scarce. But his
anecdotal observations on the benefits of early treatment were
echoed by several U.S. doctors.
‘COPY-CATTING’
Gilead on Monday said it aims to manufacture another 2 million
courses of remdesivir this year, but did not comment on how it plans
to distribute, or sell, those supplies for use by hospitals. The
company has licensed the antiviral to several generic drugmakers,
who will be allowed to sell the medication in over 100 low-income
nations. Although much about the coronavirus remains unknown, a key
reason hospitals say they now are more prepared owes to teamwork.
Many doctors described a kind of unofficial network of information
sharing. In hard-hit Italy, Dr. Lorenzo Dagna of the IRCCS San
Raffaele Scientific Institute in Milan, organized conference calls
with institutions in the United States and elsewhere to share
experiences and anecdotes treating COVID-19 patients. McLaren’s
Staricco said the Michigan hospital chain adopted its policy on use
of blood thinners by looking at peers at Detroit Medical Center and
Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
As more institutions put their guidelines online, he said, there was
“lots of copy-catting going on.”
(Reporting by Nick Brown in New York, Deena Beasley in Los Angeles,
Gabriela Mello in São Paulo and Alexander Cornwell in Dubai.;
Additional reporting By Alistair Smout in London, Matthias Blamont
in Paris, Emilio Parodi in Milan, Lisa Barrington in Dubai, Rocky
Swift in Tokyo and Sangmi Cha in Seoul.; Editing by Michele
Gershberg and Marla Dickerson)
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