Another Drug Shortage Caused by Covid-19 Has Me Worried

By Victoria Reed, PNN Columnist

I recently read a news article about the Food and Drug Administration issuing an emergency use authorization for Actemra (tocilizumab) for the treatment of hospitalized covid-19 patients. The medication was originally developed as a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis (RA), one of the chronic pain conditions I live with.  

Actemra is a biologic drug that calms down overactive immune systems by blocking the interleukin-6 (IL-6) receptor. Persistent dysregulated expression of the IL-6 receptor is involved in the pathogenesis of RA and other chronic inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. It is believed that this over-activation of the IL-6 receptor is also responsible for the so-called “cytokine storm” that causes severe illness and death in covid-19 patients.

The symptoms of RA are pain, fatigue and swelling in the lining of the joints and other parts of the body, including the heart, lungs and eyes. This inflammation can lead to disability, joint destruction and cause serious damage to the lungs and heart.

I have had long-term success controlling my RA symptoms with Actemra and have been getting the drug by IV infusion monthly for about 8 years. Prior to that, I didn’t have good control with other biologic meds such as Enbrel and Orencia.

When I read that news story, I was initially only mildly concerned about Actemra becoming unavailable. Nevertheless, I contacted my doctor for confirmation that I was still on track for my upcoming monthly infusion. However, she did not and could not confirm that the medication would be available to me. Why?

Actemra has now been hijacked by doctors treating covid-19 patients, and this has created a major shortage. I have been informed that its availability for RA patients is uncertain for the foreseeable future. This is really very upsetting!

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Covid-19 patients are using up resources in hospitals across the country. The overwhelming needs of these severely ill patients are causing other patients who need surgery or have treatable illnesses to die from a lack of available resources. Hospitals in hard-hit areas are short on everything -- staff, meds, beds and time. As a result, many chronic pain patients like me are being denied the treatments that we rely on to have functional lives. I must say that this seems patently unfair.

What’s even more disconcerting is that Genentech, Actemra’s manufacturer, can’t say when the shortage will end and expects “additional intermittent periods of stockouts (lack of supply) in the months ahead, especially if the pandemic continues at the current pace.”

RA and lupus patients saw this happen earlier in the pandemic when word got out that Plaquenil (hydroxychloroquine) might help treat covid-19. That medication also became scarce and was inaccessible to patients with autoimmune conditions for a while.  

One thing for sure is we are all very tired of the covid virus and its variants. I understand that doctors and scientists are desperate to find things that work, and they want to save lives. But I rely on Actemra to help relieve my pain and fatigue and keep damaging inflammation down. It is the mainstay of my treatment.  

Due to the Actemra shortage, I may have to consider other medications that might not work as well or just wait out the shortage and hope my disease activity doesn’t become unbearable.  

If the pandemic continues, many more people are going to lose their lives from covid infections. However, all patients deserve an equal chance at receiving the care they need, including chronic pain patients. The pain community is already suffering from opioid hysteria and many of us have to fight to stay on these pain medications. We shouldn’t have to fight for our other meds too! 

RA is a serious, systemic and often misunderstood condition that can shorten a lifespan by many years if not treated aggressively and with the proper medications.  Patients sometimes go through many trials of medications before finding one that relieves symptoms and arrests disease activity.  

I truly hope this shortage is short-lived -- for myself and others like me -- who rely on Actemra to remain functional and productive.  

Victoria Reed lives in Cleveland, Ohio. She suffers from endometriosis, fibromyalgia, degenerative disc disease and rheumatoid arthritis.