What could White House doctors treat Trump with? Only two COVID-19 therapeutics have gotten emergency FDA approval - but keeping the president's blood pressure, cholesterol and inflammation levels down may the key to how he fares

  • FDA officials have given emergency use  authorization for remdesivir and convalescent plasma to treat COVID-19 
  • Remdesivir is an antiviral thought to reduce death risks by 30% and works best in severe cases 
  • The White House confirmed Friday morning that Trump has developed mild, cold-like symptoms since testing positive for COVID-19 on Thursday night
  • A cheap steroid not yet approved to treat coronavirus in the US lowers death risks by nearly 50% but may be harmful to mildly-ill patients
  • Trump takes statins and aspirin to reduce his risk of heart attack or stroke
  • Statins may reduce coronavirus death risks and combat high blood pressure and inflammation that put Trump at risk for severe COVID-19  
As president, Donald Trump is sure to get the most promising treatments for COVID-19 - but only a handful have shown promise to bat back the disease.  
Since announcing that he and first lady Melania Trump announced they had tested positive for coronavirus late Thursday night, the president has begun exhibiting mild 'cold-like' symptoms, according to the New York Times. 
His symptoms were confirmed by Dr Sean Conley, but the White House physician has not revealed what, if any, treatments the president might receive. 
So long as his symptoms remain mild, he will likely receive no treatment other  than over-the-counter anti-inflammatories, like acetaminophen Harvard University infectious disease physician Dr Mark Poznansky told DailyMail.com
Currently, only the antiviral remdesivir and plasma from COVID-19 survivors have been given emergency use authorization to treat coronavirus by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).  
Because Trump is 74, obese and has less than perfect heart health, he is at risk for more severe coronavirus, and more likely than a younger, healthier adult to need treatment. 
And with those risks, drugs to keep the president's blood pressure and cholesterol may be as important to how well he copes with COVID-19 as innovative treatments for coronavirus will be. 
DailyMail.com breaks down how the president might be treated for COVID-19. 
President Trump currently has  mild symptoms of coronavirus, meaning he may be a good candidate for treatment with the antiviral remdesivir (file)
President Trump currently has  mild symptoms of coronavirus, meaning he may be a good candidate for treatment with the antiviral remdesivir (file)
So far, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has only given emergency use authorization (EUA) - an expedited, interim form of approval with a lower standard  - just three therapeutics to treat coronavirus. 
The agency has already revoked its EUA for hydroxychloroquine, the malaria drug that Trump infamously promoted, and took himself as an unproven preventive. 
That leaves just two authorized treatments: remdesivir and convalescent plasma. 
REMDESIVIR COULD HELP KEEP THE PRESIDENT'S VIRAL LOAD LOW AND SHORTEN HIS ILLNESS 
Gilead's antiviral remdesivir is the most well-proven treatment for coronavirus that has received the FDA's emergency approval. 
Remdesivir was originally developed to treat Ebola, but failed to help patients in clinical trials. 
The shelved, experimental drug was dusted off and repurposed by its developer, Gilead, when the coronavirus pandemic emerged earlier this year. 
It's not entirely clear how the drug accomplishes this feat, but it seems to stop the genetic material of the virus, RNA, from being able to copy itself. 
That, in turn, stops the virus from being able to proliferate further inside the patient's body.  
Gilead's antiviral remdesivir is the most well-proven treatment for coronavirus that has received the FDA's emergency approval
Gilead's antiviral remdesivir is the most well-proven treatment for coronavirus that has received the FDA's emergency approval
In April, Gilead announced the results of a clinical trial testing the drug in people severely ill with coronavirus. 
Half of the 397 patients, who were sick enough to need additional oxygen, but not to be placed on ventilators, improved within 10 days of a five-day treatment course and those who were on a 10-day regimen were better by the eleventh day. 
More than half of the patients were discharged from the hospital within two weeks. 
The National Institutes of Health's (NIH) own 1,063-person trial of remdesivir showed that severely ill patients who received the drug recovered 30 percent more quickly than those who got a placebo. 
Patients who got remdesivir were also 40 percent less likely to die of COVID-19, compared to those who did not get the drug.  
Data has since suggested that the drug works best when given early, but timing is key because it is most effective in severe cases. 
As President Trump has only had mild symptoms so far, he may not be a good candidate for treatment with remdesivir.  
Gilead also announced Thursday that the drug is on the cusp of full FDA approval, which would make it the first and only therapeutic to get regulators' seal of approval so far. 
FDA OFFICIALS APPROVED PLASMA FROM COVID-19 SURVIVORS TO TREAT THOSE STILL SICK AMID OUTCRY THAT ITS BENEFITS MAY BE LIMITED
Plasma is rich in immune cells developed by the body as it combats coronavirus and some studies have suggested that transfusions of the blood component can bolster the immune systems of the sick.
Plasma is rich in immune cells developed by the body as it combats coronavirus
Specifically, plasma contains antibodies, immune cells that the body generates in response to particular pathogens, including SARS-CoV-2, once a person has had the infection. 
FDA officials issued an EUA for so-called convalescent plasma in August, but it was met with criticism from scientists - including NIH director  Dr Francis Collins - that the emergency approval was premature. 
Most research suggests that levels of antibodies in plasma start to decline three months after the  donor developed symptoms. 
And plasma transfusions may do little to help someone with COVID-19 unless the donated blood component has high levels of antibodies.
Plasma transfusions have been used for more than a century to treat infections, and is considered generally safe if the donated plasma has been screened for other diseases, but it just may not be a particularly worthwhile treatment. 
OVER-THE-COUNTER ACETAMINOPHEN MAY HELP COMBAT INFLAMMATION IN AT-RISK PATIENTS LIKE TRUMP 
Inflammation is a particularly dangerous symptom in coronavirus patients. 
The body's immune response to the utterly foreign virus often runs off the rails and  the 'cytokine storm' -  a deluge of inflammatory immune proteins - can overwhelm and inadvertently damage healthy organ tissues. 
French physicians suspected early on that the anti-inflammatory drug ibuprofen might actually make coronavirus patients worse. 
That's now thought unlikely, but the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends acetaminophen as a first-line over-the-counter anti-inflammatory in case there was validity to the observation that patients given ibuprofen fared worse. 
But officials add that people who can't take acetaminophen (due to kidney or liver problems) can likely substitute ibuprofen. 
DEXAMETHASONE IS PROMISING FOR TREATING SEVERE COVID-19 - BUT IT COULD BE DANGEROUS FOR TRUMP TO TAKE IF HIS CASE STAYS MILD
A University of Oxford study found in July that, for patients so ill that they need to be on ventilators, dexamethasone can cut the risk of death by more than a third.  
Dexamethasone is a type of steroid widely used to tamp down inflammation, which can become severe and prove fatal in later stages of COVID-19.
About 2,104 patients given the drug were compared to 4,321 patients getting usual care.
It reduced deaths by 36 percent for patients sick enough to need breathing machines: 29 percent on the drug died versus 41 percent given usual care. 
For patients so ill that they need to be on ventilators, dexamethasone can cut the risk of death by more than a third - but it may make the illness worse in people with milder cases
For patients so ill that they need to be on ventilators, dexamethasone can cut the risk of death by more than a third - but it may make the illness worse in people with milder cases
It curbed the risk of death by 18 percent for patients needing just supplemental oxygen: 23 percent on the drug died versus 26 percent of the others.
However, it seemed harmful at earlier stages or milder cases of illness: 18 percent of those on the drug died versus 14 percent of those given usual care.
The clarity of who does and does not benefit 'probably will result in many lives saved,' Dr Anthony Fauci and his colleagues wrote in response to the findings. 
But timing is crucial to effective treatment with dexamethasone, data suggests. 
Severely ill patients fare best when treated early, but some research has suggested that the drug may actually worsen COVID-19 for patients who are mild or moderately ill. 
For now, President Trump is only mildly ill from coronavirus, but because he is obese and at-risk for heart disease, he is also be at high risk for developing severe COVID-19. 
DRUGS THAT TRUMP ALREADY TAKES INCLUDING STATINS AND ASPIRIN MAY HELP HIM SURVIVE CORONAVIRUS 
Former White House physician Dr Ronny Jackson revealed in 2018 that Trump takes a handful of medications on a regular basis. 
He takes aspirin to reduce his risks of having a heart attack or stroke, and a statin called Crestor to keep his cholesterol at bay. 
Being at risk for heart disease means that the president is also at risk for severe COVID-19 because the virus that causes the infection is now known to attack the cardiovascular system as well as the lungs and airway. 
President Trump already takes the statin Crestor to lower his cholesterol and it may improve his odds against coronavirus
He also takes aspirin to reduce his heart attack and stroke risks, which may in turn reduce his otherwise high risk for severe COVID-19
President Trump already takes the statin Crestor to lower his cholesterol and it may improve his odds against coronavirus (left). He also takes aspirin to reduce his heart attack and stroke risks, which may in turn reduce his otherwise high risk for severe COVID-19 (right)
The cholesterol-lowering drug, Crestor, could be key to combating the dangerous effects of coronavirus on the president's cardiovascular system. 
Recent research conducted by Chinese researchers in collaboration with University of California, Los Angeles, scientists found that people treated with statins were 45 percent less likely to die of COVID-19 than were people not taking the drugs. 
However, these drugs act on a group of cell receptors known as ACE receptors. Coronavirus attacks cells via ACE-2 receptors, and early data suggested statins may actually give the virus more targets.  
But now scientists are beginning to think the benefits outweigh the risks.  
They also have anti-inflammatory effects which could be crucial if Trump's immune system mounts a cytokine storm. 
Because Trump is technically  obese, with a BMI over 30, he is particularly at risk for this deadly complication.  

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