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FDA cautions use of steroid dexamethasone vs coronavirus

A box of dexamethasone injection ampoules is photographed at a chemists shop in London on June 16, 2020. - The steroid dexamethasone was shown Tuesday to be the first drug to significantly reduce the risk of death among severe COVID-19 cases, in trial results hailed as a "major breakthrough" in the fight against the disease. (Photo by Arman SOLDIN / AFP)

MANILA, Philippines — The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warned the public not to believe false claims that the steroid dexamethasone can prevent coronavirus infection and stressed that unregulated use and sale of the drug can cause serious illness and criminal prosecution.

“Dexamethasone is a prescription drug and should strictly be used under the supervision of a licensed physician. The drug should be only dispensed by licensed establishments to patients with valid prescription,” FDA Director General Eric Domingo said in FDA Advisory No. 2020-1131, adding that violators can be penalized with imprisonment.

Domingo issued the advisory amid reports that dexamethasone was being sold online with the false claim that it can prevent infection with the new coronavirus that causes the new coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

The false claims emerged after scientists in the United Kingdom announced that their studies showed that the steroid helped reduce deaths among patients who were already severely ill.

But Oxford University scientists, under the UK Randomised Evaluation of Covid-19 Therapy program, also explicitly said that dexamethasone did not benefit those with mild symptoms and made no claims on the drug’s effect on the virus itself.

Dexamethasone is a corticosteroid that has been in use against a range of conditions since the 1960s but it is also known to cause many side effects, including severe ones, particularly on children and pregnant women.

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