| Literature DB >> 32454984 |
Rohit Kumar1, Nitin Gupta2, Parul Kodan3, Ankit Mittal1, Manish Soneja1, Naveet Wig1.
Abstract
Coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) has reached pandemic proportions. Most of the drugs that are being tried for the treatment have not been evaluated in any randomized controlled trials. The purpose of this review was to summarize the in-vitro and in-vivo efficacy of these drugs on Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS-CoV-2) and related viruses (SARS and Middle East Respiratory Syndrome) and evaluate their potential for re-purposing them in the management of COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: Hydroxychloroquine; Lopinavir/ritonavir; Nitazoxanide; Remdisivir; SARS-CoV-2; Tocilizumab
Year: 2020 PMID: 32454984 PMCID: PMC7237624 DOI: 10.1186/s40794-020-00107-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Dis Travel Med Vaccines ISSN: 2055-0936
Fig. 1Entry and replication of SARS-CoV-2 and the drugs that inhibit the various steps
Summary of clinical studies of significance of certain important drugs used for treatment of COVID-19
| Study | Number of patients | Type of study | Patient population | Study arms | Results | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hydroxychoroquine | ||||||
| Gautret et al., France | 36 | Single arm trial | All positive cases | HCQ-20, No HCQ- 16 | Virological clearance on Day 6–70% in HCQ vs 12.5% in controls ( | [ |
| Tang et al., China | 150 | Multi-centric open labelled randomized controlled trial | All positive cases | 75- HCQ, 75- No HCQ | No difference in virological conversion rate at day28 ( | [ |
| Mahevas et al., France | 181 | Multi-centric retrospective study | All positive cases with pneumonia | 84-HCQ, 97- no HCQ | No difference in worse clinical outcomes (transfer to ICU within 7 days and/or death) between the two arms (RR- 0.93) | [ |
| Magagnoli et al., USA | 368 | Retrospective case control study | All positive veterans | HCQ- 97, HCQ + azithromycin- 113, no HCQ- 158 | Risk of death was found to be higher in those patients who received HCQ alone compared to no HCQ ( | [ |
| Lopinavir/ritonavir | ||||||
| Cao et al., China | 199 | Randomized open labelled trial | All positive patients with respiratory illness | LPV/r- 99 No LPV/r- 100 | Did not show any decrease in time to clinical improvement, mortality or viral load after addition of LPV/r | [ |
| Remdisivir | ||||||
| Grein et al., Multinational study | 53 | Multi-centric single-arm study | Patients with oxygen saturation of less than 94% | No control arm | Improvement in oxygen support class was demonstrated in 68% of the patients | [ |
| Tocilizumab | ||||||
| Roumier et al., France | 30 | Case control study | Patients (< 80 years of age) with severe disease who were rapidly deteriorating | Controls matched for age and severity | Lesser ICU admission and requirement of mechanical ventilation when compared to controls (matched for age and severity) | [ |
Summary of some drugs that can be repurposed for management of COVID-19
| Name | Mechanism of action | In-vitro studies | In-vivo studies | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SARS | MERS | SARS-CoV-2 | Others | SARS | MERS | SARS-CoV-2 | Others | ||
| Alisporivir | Cyclophilin mediated inhibition of viral replication | Completely blocked replication [ | Inhibit cytopathic effect of virus in cell culture [ | No studies | HCoV-229E [ | Not effective in mouse model [ | No animal model studies | No studies | Effective in HCV |
| Arbidol (Umifenovir) | Intercalation into membrane lipids- inhibition of membrane fusion [ | In-vitro effectiveness | No studies | In-vitro effectiveness | Influenza, Hepatitis C, Flaviviruses [ | No studies | No studies | Combined arbidol and LPV/r better than LPV/r alone [ | Prophylaxis and treatment of influenza [ |
| Auranofin [ | Cellular oxidative stress and anti-inflammatory | No studies | No studies | In-vitro effective | HIV | No studies | No studies | No studies | No studies |
| Doxycycline | Chelation of matrix metalloproteinase [ Anti-inflammatory | No studies | No studies | In-vitro effective [ | Dengue, Chikungunya, Crimean Congo haemorrhagic fever, HIV | No studies | No studies | No studies | Dengue [ |
| Isoprinosine or Inosine-pranobex | Immunomodulatory drug with antiviral activity [ | No studies | No studies | No studies | Influenza, parainfluenza virus, rhinovirus, adenovirus [ | No studies | No studies | No studies | Animal and human studies- influenza [ |
| Interferon | Immunomodulatory action leading to antiviral state | Potent antiviral effects seen [ | Effective in inhibiting cytopathogenic effects [ | No studies | Effective in inhibiting SARS related CoV [ | Not effective [ | Animal model suggests benefit [ | No studies | |
| Nitric oxide donor compounds* | Inhibits viral replication | Inhibits replication of SARS virus [ | No studies | No studies | Japanese encephalitis [ | InhaledNO improved arterial in patients with SARS [ | No studies | No Studies | Decreased severity of Coxsackie myocarditis [ |
| Oseltamavir | Neuraminidase inhibitor | Not effective [ | No studies | No studies | Influenza | No studies | No studies | No studies | Influenza |
| Teicoplanin | Inhibits viral entry via by inhibiting the enzymatic action of Cathepsin L [ | Blocks viral entry [ | Blocks viral entry [ | Blocks viral entry [ | Ebola [ | No studies | No studies | No studies | No studies |
*Includes inhaled NO, S-Nitroso N acetyl penicillamine, Glycyrrhizin