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Nursing Home Residents Overlooked in Scramble for COVID-19 Antibody Treatments

JoNel Aleccia, Kaiser Health News

Of the dozens of patients Dr Jim Yates has treated for COVID-19 at his long-term care center in rural Alabama, this one made him especially nervous.

The 60-year-old man, who had been fully vaccinated, was diagnosed with a breakthrough infection in late September. Almost immediately, he required supplemental oxygen, and lung exams showed ominous signs of worsening disease. Yates, who is medical director of Jacksonville Health and Rehabilitation, a skilled nursing facility 75 miles northeast of Birmingham, knew his patient needed more powerful interventions—and fast.

At the first sign of the man’s symptoms, Yates had placed an order with the Alabama Department of Public Health for monoclonal antibodies (mAb), the lab-made proteins that mimic the body’s ability to fight the virus. But six days passed before the vials arrived, nearly missing the window in which the therapy works best to prevent hospitalization and death.

“We’ve been pushing the limits because of the time frame you have to go through,” Yates said. “Fortunately, once we got it, he responded.”

Across the country, medical directors of skilled nursing and long-term care sites say they’ve been scrambling to obtain doses of the potent antibody therapies following a change in federal policy that critics say limits supplies for the vulnerable population of frail and elder residents who remain at highest risk of COVID-19 infection even after vaccination.

“There are people dying in nursing homes right now, and we don’t know whether or not they could have been saved, but they didn’t have access to the product,” said Chad Worz, CEO of the American Society of Consultant Pharmacists, which represents 1500 pharmacies that serve long-term care sites.

Before mid-September, doctors and other providers could order the antibody treatments directly through drug wholesaler AmerisourceBergen and receive the doses within 24 to 48 hours. While early versions of the authorized treatments required hourlong infusions administered at specialty centers or by trained staff members, a more recent approach allows doses to be administered via injections, which have been rapidly adopted by drive-thru clinics and nursing homes.

Prompt access to the antibody therapies is essential because they work by rapidly reducing the amount of the virus in a person’s system, lowering the chances of serious disease. The therapies are authorized for infected people who’ve had symptoms for no more than 10 days, but many doctors say they’ve had best results treating patients by day 5 and no later than day 7.

After a slow rollout earlier in the year, use of monoclonal antibody treatments exploded this summer as the delta variant surged, particularly in Southern states with low COVID-19 vaccination rates whose leaders were looking for alternative—albeit costlier—remedies.

By early September, orders from seven states—Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Texas—accounted for 70% of total shipments of monoclonals.

Those Southern states, plus three others—Arkansas, Kentucky, and North Carolina—ordered new courses of treatment even faster than they used their supplies. From July 28 to Sept 8, they collectively increased their antibody stockpiles by 134%, according to a KHN analysis of federal data.

Concerned the pattern was both uncontrolled and unsustainable given limited national supplies, officials with the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) stepped in to equalize distribution. HHS barred individual sites from placing direct orders for the monoclonals. Instead, they took over distribution, basing allocation on case rates and hospitalizations and centralizing the process through state health departments.

“It was absolutely necessary to make this change to ensure a consistent product for all areas of the country,” Dr Meredith Chuk, who is leading the allocation, distribution, and administration team at HHS, said during a conference call.

But states have been sending most doses of the monoclonal antibody treatments, known as mAbs, to hospitals and acute care centers, sidestepping the pharmacies that serve long-term care sites and depleting supplies for the most vulnerable patients, said Christopher Laxton, executive director of AMDA, the Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine.

While vaccination might provide 90% protection or higher against serious COVID-19 in younger, healthier people, that’s not the case for the older adults who typically live in nursing homes.

“You have to think of the spectrum of immunity,” Laxton said. “For our residents, it’s closer to 60%. You know that 4 out of 10 are going to have breakthrough infections.”

The mAb treatments have been authorized for use in high-risk patients exposed to the virus, and experts in long-term care say that is key to best practices in preventing outbreaks in long-term care facilities. That could include, for example, treating the elderly roommate of an infected nursing home patient. But because of newly limited supplies, many long-term care sites have started to restrict use to only those who are infected.

Still, some states have worked to ensure access to mAbs in long-term care sites. Minnesota health officials rely on a policy that prioritizes residents of skilled nursing facilities for the antibody therapies through a weighted lottery. In Michigan, state medical director Dr William Fales directed emergency medical technicians and paramedics to the Ascension Borgess Hospital system in Kalamazoo to help administer doses during recent outbreaks at two centers.

“The monoclonal antibodies made a huge difference,” said Renee Birchmeier, a nurse practitioner who cares for patients in nine of the system’s sites. “Even the patients in the assisted living with COPD, they’re doing OK,” she said, referring to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. “They’re not advancing, but they’re doing OK. And they’re alive.”

Long-term care sites have accounted for a fraction of the orders for the monoclonal treatments, first authorized in November 2020. About 3.2 million doses have been distributed to date, with about 52% already used, according to HHS. Only about 13,500 doses have gone to nursing homes this year, according to federal data. That doesn’t include other long-term care sites such as assisted living centers.

The use is low in part because the treatments were originally delivered only through intravenous infusions. But in June, the Regeneron monoclonal antibody treatment was authorized for use via subcutaneous injections—four separate shots, given in the same sitting—and demand surged.

Use in nursing homes rose to more than 3200 doses in August and nearly 6700 in September, federal data shows. But weekly usage dropped sharply from mid-September through early October after the HHS policy change.

Nursing homes and other long-term care sites were seemingly left behind in the new allocation system, said Cristina Crawford, a spokesperson for the American Health Care Association, a nonprofit trade group representing long-term care operators. “We need federal and state public health officials to readjust their priorities and focus on our seniors,” she said.

In an Oct 20 letter to White House policy adviser Amy Chang, advocates for long-term care pharmacists and providers called for a coordinated federal approach to ensure access to the treatments. Such a plan might reserve use of a certain type or formulation of the product for direct order and use in long-term care settings, said Worz, of the pharmacy group.

So far, neither the HHS nor the White House has responded to the letter, Worz said. Cicely Waters, a spokesperson for HHS, said the agency continues to work with state health departments and other organizations “to help get COVID-19 monoclonal antibody products to the areas that need it most.” But she didn’t address whether HHS is considering a specific solution for long-term care sites.

Demand for monoclonal antibody treatments has eased as cases of COVID-19 have declined across the United States. For the week ending Oct 27, an average of nearly 72,000 daily cases were reported, a decline of about 20% from two weeks prior. Still, there were 2669 confirmed cases among nursing home residents the week ending Oct 24, and 392 deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

At least some of those deaths might have been prevented with timely monoclonal antibody therapy, Worz said.

Resolving the access issue will be key to managing outbreaks as the nation wades into another holiday season, said Dr Rayvelle Stallings, corporate medical officer at PruittHealth, which serves 24,000 patients in 180 locations in the Southeast.

PruittHealth pharmacies have a dozen to two dozen doses of monoclonal antibody treatments in stock, just enough to handle expected breakthrough cases, she said.

“But it’s definitely not enough if we were to have a significant outbreak this winter,” she said. “We would need 40 to 50 doses. If we saw the same or similar surge as we saw in August and September? We would not have enough.”

Phillip Reese, an assistant professor of journalism at California State University-Sacramento, contributed to this report.

This article originally appeared on Kaiser Health News (KHN). KHN is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

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