| Literature DB >> 32645974 |
Rajkumar Singh Kalra1, Dhanendra Tomar2, Avtar Singh Meena3, Ramesh Kandimalla4,5.
Abstract
The rapidly evolviene">ngEntities:
Keywords: ACE2; COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; cardiovascular disease (CVD); cardiovascular system; hydroxychloroquine; therapeutics
Year: 2020 PMID: 32645974 PMCID: PMC7400328 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens9070546
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Figure 1SARS-CoV-2, angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), and cardiovascular complications. (A) Transmembrane ACE2 receptor facilitates SARS-CoV-2 entry to host cell primarily in the lungs, and then the vascular system, postulating cardiovascular complications by causing inflammation and myocardial dysfunction. SARS-CoV-2 access to the systemic circulation via the lungs potentiates heart infection, while its direct infection of associated pericytes and endothelial cells may cause vascular endothelial dysfunction. Cardiac SARS-CoV-2 infection causes micro-vessel dysfunction, and elevated immunoreactivity disrupts atherosclerotic plaques leading to the progression of the acute coronary syndromes. SARS-CoV-2 infection of alveolar pneumocytes (type II) cells progressively develops the systemic inflammation and elevated immunoreactivity that eventually produces the ‘cytokine storm’, marked by elevated IL-6, IL-7, IL-22, and CXCL10 cytokine levels. It potentiates T-cell and macrophage activation infiltrating infected myocardial tissues and may produce severe cardiac damage and myocarditis, leading to heart failure. Cytokine storm may further increase damage of cardiac monocytes causing myocardial dysfunction and subsequent development of arrhythmia. These events cumulatively produce cardiac dysfunction. (B) Manifestation (%) of cardiovascular complications in hospitalized COVID-19 patients reported in key clinical studies exhibiting comorbidities including hypertension, cardiovascular disease (CVD), cerebrovascular disease, coronary artery disease and rate of cardiac injury, shock, heart failure, and arrhythmia in low (LS), and high severity (HS) patient groups. p values indicate *** (<0.001), ** (<0.01), and * (<0.05) statistical significance.
Figure 2SARS-CoV-2 pathology and ACE2-led regulation of cardiovascular function of the Renin-Angiotensin System (RAS). (A) Schematic diagram illustrating the central role of ACE2 in SARS-CoV-2 recognition and the differential regulation of the RAS system for cardiovascular protection or cardiac injury. SARS-CoV-2 spike (S) protein undergoes priming by the TMPRSS2, a host cell membrane protease, and it subsequently binds to ACE2 infecting the host cell. In the RAS system, ACE2 activity with MasR, and AT2R receptors provides cardiovascular protection. In contrast, a reduced ACE2 activity as a result of its binding to SARS-CoV-2 and engulfment into the cell may elevate ACE activity and Ang II levels that essentially potentiates cardiac damage/injury. (B) ACE2 gene expression data of ACE2 retrieved from Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) showing its expression across human tissues, wherein heart tissues are marked in red at x-axis. Expression values are shown in the log10 scale for TPM (Transcripts Per Million) unit. (C,D) ACE2 and TMPRSS2 mRNA levels retrieved from Human Protein Atlas (HPA; C) and Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx; D) showing their co-expression across various human tissues; heart tissues are marked in red at x-axis.
Pre-clinical readouts from the key in vitro studies investigating therapeutic efficacy of HCQ against SARS-CoV-2. HCQ, Hydroxychloroquine; EC50, Effective concentration; AZM, Azithromycin.
| Investigation/References | Cell Systems | Drug, Concentration, and Assay Time (h) | Study Control | Key Findings/Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yao et al. 2020 | Vero E6 cell (Origin-African green Monkey) | CQ and HCQ | - | -HCQ showed better SARS-CoV-2 inhibitory activity than CQ. |
| Liu et al. 2020 | Vero E6 Cells | CQ and HCQ | PBS (Phosphate buffer saline) | -HCQ inhibited the steps including infection/entry and post-infection |
| Wang et al. 2020 | Vero E6 Cells | CQ and others * | DMSO | -HCQ inhibited the viral activity at low µM conc. (effective conc. EC50 = 1.13 μM) |
| Andreani et al. 2020 | Vero E6 cells | CQ- 1, 2 or 5 μM associated with 5 or 10 μM for azithromycin. | - | Combination of hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin has a synergistic effect in vitro on SARS-CoV-2 at concentrations |
| Keyaerts et al. 2004 (*Earliest report from the SARS-CoV) | Vero E6 cell | CQ | - | -CQ potently inhibits SARS-CoV activity at a lesser (8.8 ± 1.2 μM) concentration than its cytostatic activity (261.3 ± 14.5 μM) |
Characteristics of HCQ therapeutic regimes and their outcomes in key comprehensive clinical studies.
| Investigation/Reference | Investigation Type/Design | Patients (Total No) | Regimes | Severity of COVID-19 Disease | Results/Key Findings | Comment | Location | Limitation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Con | HCQ | ||||||||
| Chen J et al. (2020) | Randomized and controlled trial | 15 | 15 | HCQ- 400 mg for 5 days | 6–7 days symptomatic patients, unclear severity | Indifferent outcomes in groups. By day 7, no significant change in conversion rate (86.7% vs 93.3%) observed. | Patients were tested negative for COVID-19 at 2 weeks | Shanghai, China | Smaller sample size. Not peer-reviewed, availability in Chinese language |
| Gautret P et al. (2020a) | Open-label trail, Non-randomized, Non-blinded | 16 | 26 | HCQ- 600 mg for 10 days | Asymptomatic patients-17%, Patients with respiratory symptoms- 61%, Chest CT pneumonia +ve patients- 22% | Unadjusted results showed significantly reduced viral titer at day 6 (HCQ-70% vs. con 12.5%, PCR based, | Exclusion of 6 patients from data (1- died, 1- withdrew, 3 needed ICU admission, 1- lost follow-up) | Marseille, France | Study design, Smaller sample-size, Exclusion of 6 patients, inconclusive long-term outcomes |
| Molina JM et al. (2020) | Prospective open-label investigation | 0 | 10 | HCQ- 600 mg for 5 days + AZM 500 mg × 1, then 250 mg | 10 patients out of 11 were on supplemental oxygen | 8 patients out of 10 were positive at day 5–6 (nasopharyngeal swab) (80%, 95% CI: 49–94) | Patient died-1, Patient transferred to ICU-2, Patient had no further HCQ post prolongation of QTc-1 | Paris, France | Smaller sample size. Not peer-reviewed. |
| Chen Z et al. (2020) | Parallel-group trail Randomized | 31 | 31 | HCQ- 400 mg for 5 days | Mild illness was observed in CT confirmed pneumonia cases | - Clinical recovery and cough remission time reduced in HCQ group, while resolution of pneumonia was higher (80.60% vs. 54.8%) in the HCQ group. | Undefined status, 4 patients developed severe illness in the control group | Wuhan, China | Smaller sample size. Not peer-reviewed. |
| Gautret P et al. (2020b) | Open-label trail, Non-randomized, Non-blinded | 0 | 80 | HCQ- 600 mg for 10 days + 500 mg, followed by 250 mg AZM | Asymptomatic- 5%, Pneumonia cases- 54%, Patients with low national early warning score (NEWS) and mild disease- 92% | Decreased nasopharyngeal viral load at 7th (83% negative) and 8th (93%) days | Patients discharged from hospital - 65 (81.3%), Patients needed ICU admission- 1, Deceased- 1 | Marseille, France | Design of the study, Smaller sample size. Not peer-reviewed. Short follow-up time period |
| Tang W et al. (2020) | Open-label, Multi-centric, Randomized, Controlled trial | 75 | 75 | HCQ- 200 mg for first 3 days, 800 mg for remaining days (total 2–3 weeks) | Patients with mild-moderate disease- 148. Patients with severe illness-2 | HCQ showed no significantly higher negative conversion probability (85.4%) than control (81.3%) patients. Adverse effects were reported in HCQ group | Adverse events in control and HCQ group were reported in 7 and 21 patients respectively | Shanghai, Anhui, Hubei, China | Smaller sample size. Not peer-reviewed. |
| Million M et al. (2020) | Open-label trail, Non-randomized, Non-blinded | 0 | 1061 | HCQ- 200 mg (3 X/day) for 10 days + 500 mg AZM (day-1), followed by 250 mg for next 4 days | Patients had 20.5% and 2.2% moderate and severity scores respectively | In 10 day regime, good clinical results and virological cure were reported in 973 patients (91.7%). HCQ+AZM treatment before COVID-19 illness is safe and has low fatality rate in patients | Majority of patients had relatively mild symptoms at start (95%), therefore, only 10 patients (0.9%) transferred to the ICU, & 8 (0.75%) patients died | Marseille, France | Study design. Incomplete data on some patients. Unsynchronized diagnostic reports |
| Mahevas M et al. (2020) | Multi-centric, Non-Randomized, aim to emulate a target trial | 97 | 84 | HCQ- 600 mg for about ~7–8 days | Most patients had bilateral pneumonia, and 75% moderate or severe illness | No significant relief was observed in HCQ group as compared to control at day 7 in hospitalized patients. All comorbidities were less frequent in the HCQ group. | 17 (20%) patients in the HCQ group, received concomitant AZM, while 64 (76%) received amoxicillin and clavulanic acid. | Créteil, Suresnes, Evry, and Paris, France | Not peer-reviewed. No randomization, Unbalanced prognostic variables across hospitals. |
| Magagnoli J et al. (2020) | Retrospective analysis, Non-randomized | 158 | 97 (HCQ), 113 (HCQ+AZ) | - | All confirmed COVID-19 patients. No severity was specified | No evidence of HCQ either with or without AZM, lessen the risk of mechanical support in patients | Study comprises only men aged over 65 years, most black population | Virginia, and South | Study design. Not peer-reviewed. Possibility of selection bias. |
| Mathies D et al. (2020) -Case report | Case report | 0 | 1 | HCQ- 400 mg for 1st day, then 200 mg for remaining 11 days | 77-year-old COVID-19 positive patient with a heart transplant, moderate symptoms | Patient with existing dyspnea and dry cough, showed no further deterioration of the clinical state post HCQ medication. After 12 days, all negative | Patients survived and discharged from hospital after 12 days and had symptoms | Koblenz, Germany | - |
| Lane JCE et al. (2020) -Case series | A multinational, network cohort and self-controlled case series study | 310, 350 (SSZ) | HCQ-956374 HCQ+AZM- 323122, HCQ+ AMX- 351956 | - (variable) | 16 patients had severe adverse events | No excess risk of severe events was identified when 30-day HCQ and SSZ (sulfasalazine) were compare. While, AZM + HCQ increased risk CVD and morality | cardiovascular complications in HCQ+AZM group are likely due to synergistic effects on QT length | Germany, Japan, USA Netherlands, Spain, & UK. | Not peer-reviewed. Potential risk of overlapping in patient datasets, variance in data |
Abbreviations: HCQ, Hydroxychloroquine; CQ, Chloroquine; EC50, Effective Concentration; AZM, Azithromycin; SSZ, Sulfasalazine; AMX, Amoxicillin; CT, Computed tomography; NEWS, National early warning score; PCR, Polymerase chain reaction; ICU, Intensive care unit; QTc, Corrected Q and T wave. ** Last 2 rows in the dark enlist details of clinical case report/series.
Figure 3Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ): SARS-CoV-2 replication and immunomodulatory activities -proposed mechanism. (A) HCQ impacts the binding of SARS-CoV-2 S-protein and ACE2 receptor at the host cell surface by altering the ACE-2 n-terminal glycosylation. HCQ restricts SARS-CoV-2 infection by increasing endosomal pH that disrupts SARS-CoV-2 envelope fusion (requires acidic pH) with endosome membrane phospholipids and subsequent release of its sRNA genome. This is a crucial step that could intervene in its further replication/transcription by RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp, viz., nsp12) and synthesis of its spike (S), membrane (M), envelope (E), nucleocapsid (N), and nsp3 (a replicase complex component). SARS-CoV-2 infection exploits host cell’s ribosome machinery to synthesize its non-structural proteins (NSPs) that constitutes a replicase-transcriptase complex that is enrolled further to synthesize its sub-genomic RNA. Viral proteins get translated in ER and processed in Golgi before assembling into the nucleocapsid and budding it as a mature virion. HCQ is postulated to alter the maturation of M protein at Golgi, resulting in the collapse of viral assembly. Besides interrupting glycosylation of the ACE2 receptor, HCQ also seems to restrict biosynthesis of the sialic acids that play a part in host cells binding with SARS-CoV-2. The role of HCQ is also implicated in attenuating the activation of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase that could further impact viral replication. (B) HCQ modulates immune function and reduces inflammation. HCQ-led increase in endosomal pH impacts MHC Class I and II antigen cross-presentation. It alters the preparation and development of SARS-CoV-2 Ag-specific T-cells and B-cells. HCQ also impacts the onset of cytokine release from the innate immune system by attenuating DNA/RNA interaction and by activation of cGAS/STING signaling and by disrupting binding to TLR7/9 by increasing the endosomal pH. HCQ impact on these axes further attenuates NFkB nuclear function in promoting the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokine (IFN I, IL-6, IL-12 etc.). In the cardiac tissue, HCQ also attenuates TNFα production in the macrophages and thereby reduces expression of TNFR (TNFα receptor)-1/2 at the membrane of nearby monocytes, which further restricts TNFα’s role in the extravasation of neutrophils that supports opening up the tight junctions of vascular endothelial cells and stimulates leukocyte adhesion molecules (LAM) expression.
Figure 4SARS-CoV-2, ACE2, and potential cardiovascular risk factors: assessing the vulnerability of COVID-19 infection. (A) Schematic diagram showing the risk of NO2 and nicotine in the modulation ACE2 expression, wherein levels of ACE2 and ratio of Ang II/Ang 1–7 determine the cardiovascular pathology. NO2 might increase, while nicotine might decrease the ACE2 levels, and this could alter the ratio of Ang II/Ang 1–7 in the heart triggering hypertension and risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Other potential factors that could potentially alter ACE2 expression include its genetic polymorphism, geographic localization, ethnicity, age, gender, and varied protein stability. (B) Graph (violin plot; image credit: Human Protein Atlas) shows the normalized protein expression of ACE2 levels in the blood plasma samples of the control males and females, where a relatively higher ACE2 expression can be seen in males than the females. (C) Graphs showing a lower ACE2 protein stability during death (on Hardy scale) and ischemia (calculated aa ischemic time) (image credit: Human Protein Atlas).
Table listing ongoing clinical studies investigating the efficacy of HCQ in therapeutic and prophylactic settings with an emphasis on cardiovascular concerns.
| Trail Identifier | Study Title | Study Type/Design | Study Phase | Volunteers (Active) | Interventions/Drug(s) | Active Comparator | Primary Outcome | Location | Study Sponsor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT04371926 | Prophylactic Benefit of HCQ in COVID-19 Cases with Mild to Moderate Symptoms and in Healthcare Workers with High Exposure Risk (PREVENT) | Interventional, Randomized | - | 64 | HCQ, 400 mg (day-1), then 200 mg for next 4 days (b.i.d.) | No-HCQ arm | Prophylactic Benefit of HCQ in patients and healthcare workers | - | Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia Research Foundation |
| NCT04341441 | Will Hydroxychloroquine Impede or Prevent COVID-19 (WHIP COVID-19) | Interventional, Randomized | Phase 3 | 3000 | HCQ, 400 mg (day-1), then 200 mg for a week (b.i.d.) | Placebo | Use of HCQ as a preventive therapy against COVID-19 | United States | Henry Ford Health System |
| NCT04371744 | AI for QT Interval Analysis of ECG From Smartwatches in Patient Receiving Treatment for Covid-19 (QT-Logs) | Observational, Cohort, Prospective | - | 100 | Not Applicable | - | Measurement of QTc using an AI and ECG data via smartwatches, compare to standard 12 leads ECG | Marseille, France | Assistance Publique Hopitaux De Marseille |
| NCT043329 | Outcomes Related to COVID-19 treated with HCQ Among In-patients with Symptomatic Disease (ORCHID) | Interventional, Randomized | Phase 3 | 510 | HCQ, 400 mg (day-1), then 200 mg for next 5 days (b.i.d.) | Placebo | Determine the COVID Ordinal Scale for patients on day 15 | United States | Massachusetts General Hospital |
| NCT04353245 | Study of Biomarkers in the Long-term Impact of Coronavirus Infection in the Cardiorespiratory System (PostCOVID19) | Observational [Registry], Case-Control | - | 130 | Arm treatment (HCQ + AZM) | - | Fibrosis on cardiac resonance and/or decreased functional capacity on ergo-spirometry | São Paulo, SP, Brazil | University of Sao Paulo General Hospital |
| NCT04372082 | Hydroxychloroquine or Diltiazem-Niclosamide for the Treatment of COVID-19 (HYdILIC) | Interventional, Randomized | Phase 3 | 480 | HCQ, 2200 mg (t.i.d.) during 10 days in addition to SOC; While niclosamide 500 mg × 4 at J1 then 500 mg (b.i.d.) + diltiazem 60 mg (t.i.d.) during 10 days | HCQ, Diltiazem & Niclosamide | Composite criteria- death, clinical worsening, and assisted-ventilation | Lille, France | University Hospital, Lille, France |
| NCT04361422 | Isotretinoin in Treatment of COVID-19 (Randomized) | Interventional, Randomized | Phase 3 | 300 | Isotretinoin, 13-cis retinoic acid 0.5 mg/kg/day b.i.d. for 1 month. Sham compa- HCQ 500 mg/12 h & other drugs | Active Comp: HCQ and other drugs+ isotretinoin | Viral clearance and COVID-19 virus load | Tanta city, Egypt | Tanta University, Egypt |
| NCT04374019 | Novel Agents for Treatment of High-risk COVID-19 Positive Patients | Interventional (Clinical Trial), Randomized | Phase 2 | 240 | HCQ 200 mg (t.i.b.) for 14 days. HCQ combination with AZM, Ivermectin, and Camostat Mesilate are also enrolled | - | Proportion of patients experiencing clinical deterioration | Kentucky, United States | Susanne Arnold, University of Kentucky |
| NCT04382625 | Hydroxychloroquine in SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) Pneumonia Trial | Interventional, Randomized (Open Label) | Phase 4 | 120 | HCQ 400 mg × 2 (800 mg) then 200 mg, t.i.b. (600 mg/24 h period) starting 8 h after 1st dose, total 14 doses over 5 days | - | Data collection, Change from Baseline Oxygenation on Day 1-5 | Washington SU, USA | Kootenai Health, United States |
| NCT04333355 | Safety in Convalescent Plasma Transfusion to COVID-19 | Interventional, Open label | Phase 1 | 20 | Convalescent Plasma | - | Adverse effects of administration of convalescent plasma | Mexico | Hospital San Jose Tec de Monterrey, Mexico |
| NCT04358068 | Evaluating the Efficacy of Hydroxychloroquine and Azithromycin to Prevent Hospitalization or Death in Persons With COVID-19 | Interventional, Randomized | Phase 2 | 2000 | HCQ (200 × 2 mg day-1, then 200 mg × 2 for 6 days) + AZM (250 mg × 2 mg- Day 0, then 250 mg once daily for 4 doses (4 days) | Placebo | Proportion of patients’ mortality with COVID-19 | San Diego, United States | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), USA |
| NCT04373044 | Antiviral Therapy and Baricitinib for the Treatment of Patients with Moderate or Severe COVID-19 | Interventional (Clinical Trial), Open label | Phase 2 | 59 | 1) HCQ, PO t.i.d., 2) lopinavir/ritonavir PO b.i.d., or 3) remdesivir. | - | Proportion of patients requiring invasive mechanical ventilation or dying | United States | University of Southern California, United States |
| NCT04349410 | The Fleming [FMTVDM] Directed CoVid-19 Treatment Protocol (FMTVDM) | Interventional, Randomized | Phase 2, Phase 3 | 500 | HCQ, 200 mg po q 8 hrs (600 mg qD) for 10-days, & HCQ regime with other drugs | - | Improvement in FMTVDM Analyzed by nuclear imaging | United States | The Camelot Foundation, USA |
Abbreviations: HCQ, Hydroxychloroquine; CQ, Chloroquine; AZM, Azithromycin; SCO, Standard of care; b.i.d., bis in die (twice a day, for HCQ dose); t.i.d., ter in die (trice per day); QTc, Corrected Q and T wave; AI, Artificial intelligence, PO, Per os (Orally); ECG, electrocardiogram; FMTVDM, Fleming Method for Tissue and Vascular Differentiation and Metabolism.