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Outside medical experts question portrayal of president's condition - STAT

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Infectious disease experts and doctors who have treated Covid-19 patients questioned on Sunday whether President Trump’s illness might be more severe than his medical team and the White House have let on, pointing to at least three warning signs that came to light during a briefing from the president’s doctors on Sunday.

The main concern: Trump started receiving the steroid dexamethasone, which is recommended only for hospitalized Covid-19 patients who are on ventilators or require oxygen. Trump’s medical team said Sunday they planned to continue giving him dexamethasone even as they touted that Trump was not on supplemental oxygen at that point and not having difficulty breathing.

“I think today’s news means he’s sicker than I thought he was on Friday and Saturday,” said Nahid Bhadelia, the medical director of Boston Medical Center’s Special Pathogens Unit.

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Outside experts also raised other reasons for skepticism.

For one, Trump has experienced at least two drops in his oxygen levels, his doctors confirmed Sunday. One, on Friday, led to doctors giving the president oxygen at the White House. During the Sunday briefing, the president’s lead physician, Sean Conley, said Trump’s oxygen levels had dropped again Saturday but he wasn’t clear whether oxygen had been provided again. It was that second episode that led the team to start him on dexamethasone, the doctors said. To the outside experts, two periods of low oxygen levels indicated this wasn’t a mild illness.

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The medical team’s remarks about what they had seen on the president’s lung imaging also raised questions. Conley said “there are some expected findings” without offering further details, but experts noted that he did not say Trump’s lungs appeared healthy. The imaging can show signs of pneumonia and inflammation.

“There are the things we know, and there are the things we can deduce between the lines. It feels like a whole lot of Kremlinology and I’d just be happier if they’d tell us the truth,” said Robert Wachter, the chair of the University of California, San Francisco’s department of medicine. Talking about the lung imaging, Wachter said: “What they’re really looking for is, are the lungs normal? Or is there haziness that indicates that his lungs are involved?”

Bhadelia noted that some studies have indicated that even people with mild and asymptomatic Covid-19 can have signs of illness on their lung imaging, so it would be useful to know if there were any changes in the images of the president’s lungs over time.

The outside experts acknowledged that they’re in a difficult situation trying to assess the condition of a patient they’re not treating themselves. They were also missing crucial data points that could help them get a better sense of Trump’s progression overall. Trump’s doctors haven’t said, for example, just how low his oxygen levels got. And while they have said he hasn’t had a fever since Friday, they haven’t disclosed how high his fever was when he had one.

The outside doctors said the descriptions of Trump’s treatment regimen conflict with the medical team’s rosy depictions of the president’s demeanor and energy.

“At least what they’re doing, it makes it seem like he’s pretty sick,” said Krutika Kuppalli, an infectious disease physician at the Medical University of South Carolina. “There’s a disconnect there.”

On Sunday, even as they announced that Trump was taking dexamethasone, his doctors suggested he might be discharged as soon as Monday back to the White House, where he could continue with his treatments, including his course of the intravenous antiviral remdesivir. But that left experts scratching their heads: If the president’s condition is worrying enough to start dexamethasone, surely he should stay in the hospital for longer, particularly given that people with Covid-19 can have manageable symptoms for several days before taking a quick turn for the worse.

“When I heard they’re thinking about discharging him tomorrow, my BS detector went wild,” Wachter said.

Trump’s medical team has indicated that because of who their patient is, they’re throwing every possible treatment at the problem. But the doctors have not always helped their case that they’re being transparent. Conley on Saturday had to issue a statement correcting several pieces of information provided during that day’s briefing, and on Sunday, he acknowledged he had previously been trying “to reflect the upbeat attitude” of the president when he danced around questions about what interventions the president had received.

Dexamethasone is typically reserved for the sickest Covid-19 patients because it suppresses the immune system broadly. While that can be helpful when people have severe illness — which at that point is usually driven by the body’s ramped up immune system, not the virus itself — it could hinder the useful immune attack going after the virus itself if given too early.

The steroid works differently than the other therapies Trump has received: remdesivir and an experimental monoclonal antibody cocktail that is still in clinical trials. Experts think those latter two therapies are more likely to be effective if given early in the course of an illness, because they work to halt the actual infection.

David Juurlink, an internist and the head of the division of clinical pharmacology at the University of Toronto, raised other concerns about the use of dexamethasone: its side effects.

“The main ones I would worry about in this case are the acute neuropsychiatric side effects. These are not rare,” he said. Those can include trouble sleeping and irritability, Juurlink said, but “more concerning, although rarer, are mania and psychosis.”

“The reason we don’t give it to people who are less sick is because in those people the risk of the side effects outweighs the potential benefits,” he said.

On Sunday evening, Trump left Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, where he has been hospitalized since Friday evening, for a brief excursion to wave to supporters from inside a car. Still, the outside doctors said that, based on what they knew, they didn’t see how Trump could be discharged from Walter Reed Monday, even though the White House has a hospital unit. People who develop severe illness typically do so about a week after they start to show mild symptoms. Trump first started feeling sick on Thursday, his doctor’s have said.

Plus, Trump, a 74-year-old overweight man, is in several categories that make him at higher risk for more serious complications.

“The days ahead are going to be quite critical,” Juurlink said. “When people crash with Covid, they really can crash quite quickly.”

Still, some physicians were heartened by Trump’s medical team’s reports that the president seemed to be improving Sunday.

“He seems to be better today, which is good. He seems to be improving, which is good,” said Carlos del Rio, an infectious disease expert at Emory University. del Rio suggested perhaps that the therapies Trump has received are working for him.

But he also noted that some percentage of people, regardless of the severity of their symptoms, can have a host of other challenges even after they recover from their acute illness. These “long haulers” report experiencing fatigue, brain fog, and other issues, sometimes for months.

“The question is if he can recover rapidly,” del Rio said. “We know many people take a long time to recover and to feel well.”

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