Hydroxychloroquine lowers Covid-19 death rate, Henry Ford Health study finds(detroitnews.com)
detroitnews.com
Hydroxychloroquine lowers Covid-19 death rate, Henry Ford Health study finds
https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/michigan/2020/07/02/michigan-henry-ford-health-study-finds-hydroxychloroquine-lowers-covid-19-death-rate/5365090002/
23 comments
> The study analyzed 2,541 patients hospitalized among the system’s six hospitals between March 10 and May 2 and found 13% of those treated with hydroxychloroquine died while 26% of those who did not receive the drug died.
Worthless without control group
Technically people who did not take the drug are a control group. It's just not placebo controlled. (Which is quite a big no. Unless there's a known working treatment, which should be used as the control then.)
The big question is, how well randomized are these, and what's the effect size - could be suspiciously small.
If it's not randomized at all, the results do not necessarily show the drug is good - just that it's given to healthier patients. You can try to reduce such artifact by considering matching reference subgroups.
The big question is, how well randomized are these, and what's the effect size - could be suspiciously small.
If it's not randomized at all, the results do not necessarily show the drug is good - just that it's given to healthier patients. You can try to reduce such artifact by considering matching reference subgroups.
They're all wildly different populations within different environments and infection rates. COVID-19 infects with very stochastic clustering, making controlled experiments difficult. So one may even need global meta-studies with local control groups, for meaningful results. During an uncontrolled pandemic, you just don't have that luxury and enough degree of control.
Did they have the same inclusion criteria? The people in the treatment group probably have to sign a conformity form, this implicitly exclude people that is too wasted to even hold a pen and that probably have a worse prognosis than the average. Did they include people with more than 90 years old? People with a recent previous heart attack? Small children (parents are annoying)?
Without the same inclusion criteria it's not a control group but a unrelated bunch of guys.
Without the same inclusion criteria it's not a control group but a unrelated bunch of guys.
Also known as randomized control group. That said, it should be equivalent to treatment group.
Which is exactly what I said.
That's the reason why in RCTs treatment and control groups are split from the same pool - less need to make sure they are.
That's the reason why in RCTs treatment and control groups are split from the same pool - less need to make sure they are.
I think we agree.
Just remember that the first study by Raoult claims to have a control group, but it's better described a a unrelated bunch of guys in another city. And there are other studies with similar tricks.
Just remember that the first study by Raoult claims to have a control group, but it's better described a a unrelated bunch of guys in another city. And there are other studies with similar tricks.
What do you mean? The 2,451 patients are partly made up of control group, namely, those who didn’t get the experimental treatment.
No, it's yet another observational study. The two RCTs that have been done -- for prophylactic use and for severe patients were both negative, although the studies were small, so there could be a small benefit from HCQ. No one to my knowledge has published an RCT for HCQ given early in the disease.
They also state that most of the patients that died had pre-existing conditions, but no mention of if that would have prevented them from taking HCQ, leading to the majority of the "no HCQ" cases being people who were already more likely to die. If that were controlled for, we might see the same results we've seen in every other study, that taking HCQ actually led to increased mortality rates.
If Covid has done anything for me, is that it’s teaching me how little we understand drugs and how unreliable are studies.
I have seen Hydroxychloroquine go from promising to helpful to not-helpful to damaging to promising again.
I have seen Hydroxychloroquine go from promising to helpful to not-helpful to damaging to promising again.
pg talks about this phenomena - I think it's less about the studies themselves but rather how they are covered and described by third parties with vested interests:
http://www.paulgraham.com/submarine.html
https://www.wsj.com/articles/covid-19-drug-remdesivir-to-cos...
http://www.paulgraham.com/submarine.html
https://www.wsj.com/articles/covid-19-drug-remdesivir-to-cos...
Getting properly done studies is hard. In particular the statistics are even harder and easier to mess up (the retracted Lancet paper had also statistical problems).
Still not voting for Trump.
Flagged article because even the slightest chance of Trump being right is not worth positive coverage of a drug he endorses that might be effective in fighting this pandemic.
Let's all pray that it isn't true. Let's all hope really hard that it doesn't help and Trump is still wrong. That is the most important thing.
I sense sarcasm but I could be wrong
Why is that?
Yes, Trump to be wrong is much more important than finding an effective and cheap cure for the disease that stopped half the economy.
You’re an idiot.
So does several immunity-based herbals but we since we can't patent those, they are scam and HCQ with side effects is the "real deal".
HCQ is a generic drug it’s not restricted by patents, you can only get a short term application patent for a new use of a drug if the original patent still hasn’t expired.
This is probably a good hospital with good staff and good equipment. Globally many hospitals are not so good.
There may be some involuntary selection of the patients. For example here in Argentina the retired people have a special health plan that include only some hospitals. That may change the population that goes to each hospital and change the expected death rate. Some hospitals get more rich patients. Some hospitals may get more athletes. It is very difficult to be sure, so you need a randomized control group.