Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ). Corrupt, coordinated assault managed by WHO on an inexpensive and effective treatment / Nass
I thought you could trust medical journals to a degree, but even they, whose editors are physicians, have been often unreliable on the value of chloroquines in Covid-19. How could the Lancet editors and reviewers decide to publish the very sketchy Lancet article I critiqued a few posts back? The Lancet is the world’s most-read medical journal.
Because this single Lancet paper started an avalanche that ended further study of hydroxychloroquine by the WHO, and consequently some countries (Belgium, France, Italy) banned its use for treatment of Covid-19. The Jakarta Post/Reuters reported on May 27 that WHO had instructed Indonesia’s health ministry to suspend the use of hydroxychloroquine, not only in clinical trials, but also for treatment of Covid-19. Indonesia, the world’s 4th most populous country, had been using the drug early for all cases, independent of severity, with good results. Indonesia refused to comply.
Tony Fauci announced the same day that the drug was ineffective, and a Guardian article said that the US FDA is reconsidering its guidance permitting prescribing of hydroxychloroquine for Covid-19.
I will go further down this disturbing and fascinating rabbit hole later in this post.
Returning to what the medical literature truly tells us about hydroxychloroquine for Covid-19, I credit the Annals of Internal Medicine (premier journal for my speciality) with an honest meta-analysis of the subject, which went online May 27, 2020.
What the meta-analysis said:
Background: Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) and chloroquine (CQ) have antiviral effects in vitro against severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2).
Purpose: To summarize evidence about the benefits and harms of hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine for the treatment or prophylaxis of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).
Study selection: Studies in any language reporting efficacy or safety outcomes from hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine use in any setting in adults or children with suspected COVID-19 or at risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Country
|
# of cases
|
# of deaths
|
Deaths/million
|
Use of HCQ
|
India
|
101,261
|
3,164
|
2.0
|
Early and prophylactic
|
Costa Rica
|
866
|
10
|
2.0
|
Early and prophylactic
|
Australia
|
7,068
|
99
|
4.0
|
Early and prophylactic
|
South Korea
|
11,078
|
263
|
5.0
|
Early and prophylactic
|
Argentina
|
8,371
|
382
|
8.0
|
Early and prophylactic
|
Turkey
|
150,593
|
4171
|
50.0
|
Early and prophylactic
|
Israel
|
16,643
|
276
|
32.0
|
Early and prophylactic use
|
Brazil
|
255,368
|
16,853
|
79.0
|
Early, some prophylactic use
|
U.S.
|
1,550,294
|
91,981
|
278.0
|
Late, in hospitalized patients
|
James Todaro, MD shows us that the Surgisphere company had only one employee, its founder Sapan Desai, until 2-3 months ago. Yet it supposedly manages a database comprised of 671 hospitals’ data? Something is very fishy. Dr. Chris Martenson provides his own take on the study, here. Australasian statistician Peter Ellis has discovered that a litany of awards Surgisphere’s sister database company (Quartz Clinical) claims to have received–were won by others. And it had no online presence until last September.
Bottom line, it is almost certain that the data the Lancet paper presented from Mehra, Desai et al. were fabricated, for many statistical and logistical reasons that are discussed in the links I have provided, especially in that letter with, now, 182 signatories. Yet the Mehra, Desai et al. paper, in the world’s top medical journal, was intended to be the death knell for hydroxychloroquine (and subsequently for many patients with Covid). Are you starting to see how deep the rot goes?
WHO’s “Solidarity” study of treatments for Covid-19 is huge, and hugely important. According to WHO, it currently involves recruiting patients from 400 hospitals in 35 countries, it is still adding trial sites, and 100 countries have expressed interest in participating. It was designed to “reduce the time taken” to design and conduct the trial by 80%, compared to usual procedures. “Interim trial analyses are monitored by a Global Data and Safety Monitoring Committee, which is an independent group of experts.“
This is bizarre, because the WHO’s Essential Medicines list, which “contains the medications considered to be most effective and safe to meet the most important needs in a health system,” includes chloroquine. So it’s safe for malaria, but unsafe for Covid?
‘On Saturday 23 May, the independent Data Monitoring Committee conducted an urgent review of the data that we have collected so far on the effects of hydroxychloroquine on mortality among patients admitted to hospital with COVID-19. The Committee concluded that there is “no cogent reason to suspend recruitment for safety reasons.”
‘The Committee found that the effects of hydroxychloroquine on mortality reported in the analysis by Mehra were not consistent with those observed in the RECOVERY trial. The Committee therefore recommended that the trial continue recruitment without interruption, a recommendation that was endorsed on Sunday by the MHRA.
Boris Johnson, Prince Charles, and other recovered luminaries have failed to report how they were treated, and the media didn’t ask.
But now, based on WHO stopping its trial, allegedly on the basis of one very questionable paper in the Lancet, several countries have started banning the use of hydroxychloroquine by personal physicians.
“Medical Journals Are an Extension of the Marketing Arm of Pharmaceutical Companies,” wrote Richard Smith, former editor-in-chief of the British Medical Journal (BMJ), in 2005. He then cited several of his fellow editors at other journals: “Journals have devolved into information laundering operations for the pharmaceutical industry,” wrote Richard Horton, still editor-in-chief of the Lancet… Marcia Angell, former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, lambasted the industry for becoming “primarily a marketing machine” and for Pharma co-opting “every institution that might stand in its way”… Jerry Kassirer, another former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, argues that the industry has deflected the moral compasses of many physicians…”
It is utterly demoralizing that Lancet editor Richard Horton, who denounced medical journals with the moniker “information laundering operations” complied with the publication of the questionable Lancet piece last week. Update: Horton now calls the article a “fabrication.”
Didn’t the recent NIH/NIAID treatment guidelines attempt to make doctors switch from using HCQ to using Remdesivir via a stacked deck of guideline authors who work or worked for Gilead?
Are we seeing a highly coordinated assault on unbiased scientific evidence and reporting by the WHO, the NIH, some national public health agencies, and medical journals and their authors?
Aren’t we seeing a gargantuan assault on our right to be fairly informed and choose our own medical treatments? It appears that the premier agencies and organizations, whose ostensible mission is to safeguard our health, have been captured and redirected.
Yet again, it seems, the Covid crisis has exposed the unthinkable. We cannot expect the institutions of government and society to have our best interests at heart. They clearly don’t.
We are in the midst of a crisis that requires specialized knowledge to understand and respond to. We have a federal government whose many agencies have spent over $100 billion dollars, since 9/11, on pandemic planning and response. Yet when the crisis came, they offered almost none of the masks and PPE they were supposed to have stockpiled. They had no tests, no drugs, no vaccines, and precious little good advice. Federal agencies interfered with attempts by the market to provide tests and drugs. We have learned, bitterly, it is every man/woman for him/herself.
Yet we can only change this system by working together. We have to figure out how to do so. Shining a light on the corrupt underbelly of our system is the first step. Let’s go even further.
Update May 30: India and Indonesia say they stand by use of hydroxychloroquine, as they are convinced of its benefit, but Indonesia will comply with WHO guidance and cease using it in patients who enroll in the Solidarity trial. Turkey too.
Update May 31: The Scientist has uncovered a long litany of lies, exaggerations and shady businesses associated with Dr. Sapan Desai, MD, PhD, MBA in a detailed investigative piece here.
Dr. Nass,
Your first link, the one beginning, "criticized a number of facets . . . " no longer works. It leads to a page on zenodo.org with the message; "internal server error". I have tried searching duckduckgo with variants of "lancet hcq study critique," etc but haven't been able to come up with anything definitive. Hopefully whatever document you were linking to is still available somewhere?
– Ben
Dr. Nass,
Would you care to comment on the Columbia hcq study here:
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2012410
Have not read it, but the Marik protocol, which takes into account stage of disease when determining appropriate treatment, makes more sense to me. In NYC at that time, people did anything they could to avoid the hospital, which was perceived as a place where Covid spread, or a place where care was very poor as the providers wanted to stay away from the patients.
Many people died at home–see Hennelly on greatly increased out of hospital deaths noted by EMTs.
When a quality study is done testing HCQ early in the illness I will be very interested in the outcome.
The Marik protocol has been updated specifically for Covid-19. See here: https://covid19criticalcare.com/
https://covid19criticalcare.com/
I know this article was written last year but do you know why India has a huge spike in the Covid-19 with many deaths? Did they stop using HCQ?
India has 1.3 billion people and the vast majority have to pay privately for healthcare. Some states have given it out, and some cities, but there is no national health program and no way to impose uniform standards on India's 1 million or more doctors.
However, at the end of April, India's health ministry issued new guidance for managing Covid and included ivermectin as a possible treatment. I think this was the first time any national recommendation was issued in India that included ivermectin.
I suspect that eventually the politicians want to win another election, and realize that they will get more votes by giving something back to the people.