| Literature DB >> 32773212 |
Shahamah Jomah1, Syed Mohammed Basheeruddin Asdaq2, Mohammed Jaber Al-Yamani1.
Abstract
The unprecedented challenge faced by mankind due to emergence of coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has obligated researchers across the globe to develop effective medicine for prevention and treatment of this deadly infection. The aim of this review is to compile recently published research articles on anti-COVID 19 management with their benefits and risk to facilitate decision making of the practitioners and policy makers. Unfortunately, clinical outcomes reported for antivirals are not consistent. Initial favorable reports on lopinavir/ritonavir contradicted by recent studies. Ostalmovir has conflicting reports. Short term therapy of remdesivir claimed to be beneficial. Favipiravir demonstrated good recovery in some of the cases of COVID-19. Umifenovir (Arbidol) was associated with reduction in mortality in few studies. Overall, until now, U.S. Food and Drug administration issued only emergency use authorization to remdesivir for the treatment of suspected or laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 in adults and children hospitalized with severe disease.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Favipiravir; Remdesivir; Umifenovir; lopinavir/ritonavir
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32773212 PMCID: PMC7396961 DOI: 10.1016/j.jiph.2020.07.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Public Health ISSN: 1876-0341 Impact factor: 3.718
Trials/studies involving lopinavir/ lopinavir + ritonavir.
| Study type | Trial outcome and design | Conclusion | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Case series [ | Out of 10 COVID patients, 09 received LPV and interferon α2b atomization inhalation and one only LPV. | Recovery of eosinophil count in patients on LPV were associated with improvement in viral load | Role of prior azithromycin in recovery is possible. |
| Five patients received antibiotics (azithromycin) therapy before the antiviral course. | |||
| Out of 10, 7 patients discharged and three patients stopped LPV due to intolerable adverse effects, two of them deteriorated and transferred to other hospital. | |||
| Case report [ | COVID-19 patient (43 year-old), received oxygen inhalation, LPV/RTN, recombinant human interferon a1b and ribavirin. | After discontinuation of antiviral drugs in some patients, the residual virus causes the pulmonary lesions to re-aggravate, resulting in subsequent positive viral nucleic acid test results. | Study based on single case, confounders are possible. |
| On 7th day, clinical symptoms improved significantly. | |||
| Discharged on day 13 and antiviral therapy discontinued. | |||
| Three days later, her nucleic acid test reversed to positive, and chest CT scan showed completely absorbed lesion. Restarted with aerosol inhalation of recombinant human interferon a1b. | |||
7 days later, showed clinical improvement and thereafter discharged. | |||
| Analysis of five cases [ | Two of the five cases received LPV/RTN along with supportive care, whereas, three cases were given only supportive care. | LPV/RTN didn’t reduce the duration of illness in patients with COVID 19. | Small sample size |
| Oropharyngeal swabs and sputum samples obtained daily from all cases. | |||
| Upon follow up (10 days), there was no significant difference between treatment and control group in duration of illness and PCR negative conversion. | |||
| Randomized, controlled, open-label trial [ | 99 patients received LPV/RTN, in addition to standard care (supportive management), and 100 were assigned to receive to standard care (supportive management), alone. | No benefit of LPV/RTN over the standard care in clinical improvement and mortality. | Good number of patients in both group make this study more reliable. |
| Tested group required shorter time to clinical improvement by 1 day than standard care. No significant difference was showed in other parameters. | |||
| Case report [ | A 54-year-old Korean confirmed COVID 19 man with mild respiratory illness and small lung consolidation received LPV/RTN. | LPV/RTN showed improvement in clinical symptoms and reduction of viral loads. | It is possible that the decreased load of SARS-CoV-2 resulted from the natural course of the healing process rather than administration of LPV/RTN,or both. |
| β-coronavirus viral loads significantly decreased and no or little coronavirus titers were observed in daily reports. | |||
| Pilot retrospective study [ | Of 73 cases COVID-19, 34 cases received LPV/RTN and 39 cases given LPV/RTN with arbidol (ARB); for at least 3 days. | Reduced median hospital stay in group with addition of ARB. | Only few severe cases enrolled in this study. |
| No significant difference in the end points of COVID-19 patients including cure rate, hospitalization time, rate and the time of virus turning negative between both arms. | Small sample size. | ||
| Retrospective study. | |||
| Exploratory double blind randomized controlled trial [ | Of 86 mild/moderate COVID-19 patients, 34 randomly assigned (2:2:1) to receive LPV/RTN, 35 to ARB and 17 with no antiviral medication as control. | LPV/RTN or ARB monotherapy present little benefit for improving the clinical outcome of patients hospitalized with mild/moderate COVID-19 over supportive care | Small sample size |
| LPV/RTN or ARB neither shorten the time of negative PCR conversion nor improve the symptoms of COVID-19 or pneumonia on lung CT. | Didn’t include severe/ critical cases patients. | ||
| On day 7, LPV/RTN group showed higher deterioration from moderate to severe/critical clinical status compared with the other two groups. | |||
| Retrospective study [ | In addition to the conventional therapy (oxygen inhalation and interferon-ɑ2b Injection to total 50 COVID cases, 34 of them received LPV/RTN and 16 were given ARB. | ARB monotherapy may be superior to | Didn’t mention the severity of the patients. |
| None of the patients developed severe pneumonia or ARDS, with no significant difference in fever duration between both groups. | LPV/RTN in treating COVID-19. | Retrospective data subject to confounding. | |
| Retrospective observational study [ | 53 COVID-19 patients (45 with mild illness and 8 with severe illness). | Early administration of antiviral drugs can be | Didn’t mention the doses of antiviral been used. |
| Among mild illness; 17 patients received ARB, 17 received ARB + LPV/RTN, and five received LPV/RTN. | considered. ARB may benefit patients with mild symptoms, while LPV/RTN may benefit those with severe symptoms. Prophylactic administration of common antibiotics may reduce the risk of co infection. | Most of the patients received antiviral therapy, thus there is absence of any control. | |
| Whereas, among severe patients 4 were treated with LPV/RTN, three with ARB + LPV/RTN, and one with ARB. | All patients with severe symptoms received antibiotics, it is possible that antibiotics are more potent than LPV/RTN. | ||
| 29 patients treated with antibiotics (moxifloxacin, linezolid). | |||
| All patients recovered and achieve negative SARS-COVID-2 PCR. | |||
| Prospective cohort study [ | 47 patients with confirmed cases of COVID 19 enrolled, 42 patients received LPV/RTN + adjuvant drugs (Interferon aerosol inhalation, ARB, Methoxyphenamine, eucalyptol limonene along with moxifloxacin) and 5 patients received adjuvant therapy alone. | The combination treatment of LPV/RTN and routine adjuvant medicine against pneumonia could produce much better efficacy on patients with COVID-19 infection compared to treatment with adjuvant medicine alone. | Only mild cases were included in this study. |
| All patients evaluated daily for body temperature, CBC, biochemistry and days of nCov-RNA turning negative after treatment. | Small number of cases in control group | ||
| Both groups returned to the normal therapeutic temperature, but LPV/RTN group returned to the normal body temperature with shorter time compared with the control group. | |||
| Retrospective cohort study [ | Out of 33 patients, 16 treated with LPV/RTN + ARB and 17 given LPV/RTN. | Addition of ARB to LPV/RTN has beneficial impact. | Retrospective analysis, thus increase the risk of unmeasured confounding bias. |
| At 7 days, SARS-CoV-2 could not be detected in 12/16 (75%) in combination group and in 6/17 (35%) in monotherapy group and significant improvement in chest scan in combination group (11/16-69%) compared to monotherapy group (5/17(29%)). | Small sample size. | ||
| After 14 days, SARS-CoV-2 could not be detected in 15/16 (94%) of LPV/RTN + ARB and 9/17 (52·9%) LPV/RTN. |
Trials/studies involving Remdesivir.
| Study type | Trial outcome and design | Conclusion | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Case report [ | A case of 40 years old critically ill man tested positive for COVID-19 and treated with chloroquine along with supportive therapy for 5 days, until remdesivir could be supplied on day 9 of hospitalization (days 13 of symptoms onset). 60 h later, patient was extubated and clinically improved and progressed for discharge. | Late initiation of remdesivir may still be effective in treating COVID-19 patient. | Remdesivir can provide effective improvement in COVID-19 patients based on this case report, a larger randomized control trial needed to prove it. |
| Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled [ | 237 patients with severe COVID 19 enrolled and randomly assigned (2:1 ratio) to a 158 receiving remdesivir and 79 to placebo. | No statistically significant benefit of remdesivir treatment noted, however, numerically, reduction in time to clinical improvement found in remdesivir group. | Many adverse events reported in remdesivir group also found in placebo, hence it could be disease induced or any other common component of standard care. |
| Clinical improvement results showed no significant difference between both groups and numerically shorter time in remdesivir group among patients with symptom duration of 10 days or less | |||
| Remdesivir group was associated with higher adverse events compared to control (102/155 (66%), 50/78 (64%); respectively) and was stopped early in 18 (12%) compared to four (5%) patients who stopped placebo. | |||
| Open-label, Phase 3 randomized controlled trial [ | 1063 patient with COVID-19 randomized to either receive remdesivir or placebo for the duration of hospitalization, up to total 10 days. Data suggest that the Remdesivir group were 65% more likely to have clinical improvement at Day 11 (median time to recover of 11 days vs 15 days). Mortality rate was numerically lower in remdesivir group without significant difference (8% vs 11.6%, | Remdesivir was better than placebo from the perspective of the primary endpoint, time to recovery, a metric often used in influenza trials. | Preliminary report of results, more details about the results needed to confirm the clinical efficacy and safety of remdesivir for treating COVID-19 patients. |
| Open-label, Phase 3 randomized controlled trial [ | 397 severe COVID-19 patients were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to receive remdesivir 200 mg IV on the first day, followed by remdesivir 100 mg IV each day in addition to standard of care to evaluate the efficacy and safety of 5-day (n = 200) or 10-day dosing duration. | Patients receiving a 10-day treatment course of remdesivir achieved similar improvement in clinical status compared with those taking a 5-day treatment course. | Data provided recently confirms efficacy and better tolerability of 5 days treatment than 10 days. |
| Preliminary results show higher efficacy outcomes at day-14 were found in patients with 5-day duration with no significant difference were noticed between both groups in clinical recovery (129 (65%) vs 106 (54%)) and death (16 (8%) vs 21 (11%), p value = 0.70). | |||
| More number of patients with 10-day duration discontinued the medications due to serious side effects. | |||
| Retrospective cohort study [ | 53 patients with severe COVID 19 received 10-day course of Remdesivir. At baseline, 30/53 (57%) were receiving mechanical ventilation and 4/53 (8%) were receiving extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and followed up for any clinical improvement. Day 18 of follow up, 36/53 (68%) had an improvement in oxygen-support, including 17 /30 (57%) who were on mechanical ventilation were extubated. A total of 25/53 (47%) were discharged, and 7/53 (13%) died (18% (6 out of 34 among patients receiving invasive ventilation). | Remdesivir showed clinical improvement in 36/53(68%) severe COVID-19 patients. | Remdesivir showed improvement in 68% of patients and high mortality also in 13% of the patient. |
Trials/studies involving Favipiravir.
| Study type | Trial outcome and design | Conclusion | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Exploratory Randomized, Controlled Trial [ | 29 COVID-19 confirmed cases were randomized (1:1:1) to either receive Favipiravir for 14 days or Baloxavir Marboxil (80 mg once a day orally on Day 1 and Day 4) or control group. | Findings do not support that adding either baloxavir or favipiravir under the trial dosages to the existing standard treatment benefit COVID-19 patients. | Small sample size, non-blinded trial. |
| All patients received existing antiviral treatment including lopinavir/ritonavir (400 mg/100 mg, bid, orally) or darunavir/cobicistat (800 mg/150 mg, qd, orally) and arbidol (200 mg, tid, po.). | Concurrent use of other antivirals leads to misinterpretation of results. | ||
| All of them used in combination with interferon-α inhalation. | |||
| On day 14, PCR was undetectable in all control group and 77% and 70 % in Baloxavir and Favipiravir groups, respectively. | |||
| Furthermore, there was no significant difference between all groups in clinical improvement. | |||
| One patient in the baloxavir marboxil group, and two patients in the favipiravir group transferred to ICU within seven days after trial initiation. Among all 29 patients, there was no death. | |||
| Prospective, randomized, controlled, open-label multicenter trial [ | 236 moderate/severe confirmed COVID-19 cases randomized; 116 to receive Favipiravir for 10 days and 120 to receive Umifenovir (Arbidol) for 10 days and all patients received conventional therapy. | Favipiravir, compared to Arbidol, did not significantly improve the clinically recovery rate at Day 7. Favipiravir significantly improved the latency to relief for pyrexia and cough. | Number of severe and critically ill patients were more in favipiravir that undermine the benefit of Arbidol. |
| Upon results, clinical improvement at day 7 (primary end point), did not significantly different between two groups. Whereas, in post-hoc analysis for moderate COVID-19 patients showed a significant higher clinical improvement in the Arbidol group (62/111, 55.86%) compared to Favipiravir group (70/98, 71.43%). | |||
| Favipiravir led to shorter latencies to relief for both pyrexia and cough. Whereas, no significant differences were found between both groups in the rate of auxiliary oxygen therapy (AOT) or noninvasive mechanical ventilation (NMV). | |||
| Case report [ | Two case reports with confirmed COVID-19. First case was young healthy male mild COVID-19 who received supportive care only and showed that supportive care alone with a tendency to gradually improve fever reduction and oxygenation and negative PCR found in day 20 of illness. Whereas, the second case showed 60 years old man with hypertension and diabetes mellitus admitted with severe case of COVID-19 received supportive care with Favipiravir. Since starting the drug, temperature decreased and improvement in oxygenation and dietary intake noted. | In COVID-19 patient with hypoxemia, Favipiravir showed as promising effect. Whereas, in healthy young patients, spontaneous remission in illness was observed only with supportive care. | Results based on two cases, larger studies needed to confirm these results. |
| Case report [ | 40 years old healthy female with severe COVID-19 received Ciclesonide and Favipiravir. Additionally, positive mycoplasma antigen was positive, thus levofloxacin started upon admission for 6 days. Upon follow up, fever and oxygenation didn’t worsen and improvement in chest Ct scan showed on day 6. Day 10 of hospitalization, patient discharged with improvement in symptoms and negative PCR. | The administration of Favipiravir and ciclesonide in early onset was considered to be effective in improving symptoms. | Results based on single case, larger studies needed to confirm these results. |
| An Open-Label Control Study [ | 80 confirmed | Favipiravir showed significantly better treatment effects on COVID-19 in terms of disease progression and viral clearance. | Only mild to moderate cases were included in the study. |
Trials/studies involving Umifenovir (Arbidol).
| Study type | Trial outcome and design | Conclusion | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Retrospective Multicenter Cohort Study [ | 141 non-advanced COVID-19 cases were included. 70 patients received IFN-α2b and 71 of them received Arbidol + IFN-α2b. | Arbidol in combination with IFN-α2b has no significant effect in COVID-19 RNA clearance and hospitalization than IFN-α2b monotherapy. | Retrospective study which increase the risk for confounding factors. |
| All patients received appropriate supportive care as indicated. Upon results, there were no significant differences between both groups in hospitalization time. | Severe and critically ill cases were not included in this study. | ||
| Subsequently, combination therapy group had numerically shorter time in PCR negative conversion without significant difference (23.8 days vs 27.4 days, respectively; P = 0.057). | |||
| Retrospective Study [ | Out of 81 COVID-19 patients included in the study, 45 received Umifenovir group, 18% received it for 5 days and 82% for 7–10 days and 36 in control group. Umifenovir group was found to have longer time in PCR negative conversion than control group (6 days vs 3 days, | Umifenovir treatment did not shorten the negativity time of SARS-CoV-2, or the length of hospital stay in non-ICU hospitalized patients with COVID-19. | Since Umifenovir showed lower recovery, it is vital to know control group treatment for correct interpretation. |
| Retrospective cohort study [ | Of 27 patients, 10 received chloroquine phosphate, 11 received arbidol and 6 given lopinavir/ritonavir, for 10 days. | chloroquine and arbidol (Umifenovir) could not only shorten the viral shedding interval, but also decreased the hospitalization duration and hospitalization expenses of non-severe, COVID-19 patients. | Only non-severe cases included. |
| As for the primary outcome, median viral shedding interval were shorter in Chloroquine (5.0 days, p = 0.003) and arbidol groups (8.0 days, p = 0.008). | Arbidol showed promising result. | ||
| At 10 days, negative conversion of RT-PCR was higher in Chloroquine (9 patients, p = 0.001) and arbidol groups (8 patients p = 0.009) and no patient in lopinavir/ritonavir. | Small sample size. | ||
| Additionally, in 14 days, RT-PCR was found negative in all chloroquine and arbidol groups, while only 3 patients in lopinavir/ritonavir group. | Retrospective study which increase the risk for confounding factors. | ||
| In secondary outcomes, length of hospitalization was significantly shorter in chloroquine and arbidol groups than lopinavir/ritonavir group (9.3 ± 1.8 days, 11.7 ± 3.7 days and 19.7 ± 4.4 days; respectively, p < 0.01) without significant difference between chloroquine and arbidol groups. Adverse events were not significantly difference between all three groups. | |||
| Retrospective, cohort study [ | 504 COVID-19 patients from three hospitals were included, Arbidol prescribed to 257 patients (51.0%); Oseltamivir prescribed to 66 patients (13.1%); and 259 given lopinavir/Ritonavir (51.4%). | Arbidol is able to substantially associated with a reduction in mortality among hospitalized | The study is still under peer review. |
| Overall mortality rate was 15.7% and arbidol shows to reduce mortality by 77% compared other groups (7% vs 24.7%). | COVID-19 patients. | Retrospective analyzing patients, risk of confounding bias. | |
| However, after adjusting age, sex, admission data and lesion size, all three antivirals showed reduction in mortality; by 93% in arbidol group (95% CI, 0.071 to 0.398), by 80% in Oseltamivir group (95% CI, 0.072 to 0.623) and by 64% in Lopinavir/Ritonavir (95% CI, 0.165 to 0.795). | Small sample size. | ||
| Similarly, Arbidol is also associated with faster lesion absorption by 85.20% (P = 0.0203) after adjusting for patient’s characteristics as well as Oseltamivir and Lopinavir/Ritonavir use. | |||
| Retrospective cohort study [ | 280 confirmed COVID-19 cases were retrospectively analyzed including wide spectrum of illness ranging from asymptomatic (17), mild (22), moderate(199), serious(40), to critical (6) cases; including 36% patients with comorbidities | The use of antiviral drugs (chloroquine, oseltamivir, arbidol, and lopinavir/ritonavir) did not improve viral RNA clearance. | Did not report the full dosage of antivirals. |
| Among them, 121 (43.2%) patient didn’t receive antiviral. Whereas the other 159 patients received different antiviral regimens including chloroquine (n = 17), ostalmovir (n = 13), arbidol (n = 37), chloroquine + arbidol (n = 5), lopinavir/ritonavir (n = 60), lopinavir/ritonavir + Arbidol(n = 16), and oseltamivir + Arbidol (n = 11). | Preprint trial and not peer reviewed yet | ||
| Among all patients, viral RNA was cleared in 89% of the COVID-19 patients within 21 days after illness onset. However, usage of antiviral (as combination or as monotherapy) did not improve the clearance of viral RNA compared to those did not receive antiviral drugs. Whereas lopinavir/ritonavir delayed viral RNA clearance (HR; 0·62,95% CI (0·41–0·94), even after adjusting confounding variables. | |||
| Retrospective Cohort Study [ | 49 COVID 19 case were assigned to the empirical regimens supplemented with Arbidol group (group A + ER), and 62 patients were assigned to the empirical regimens group (group ER). | Arbidol could accelerate and enhance the process of viral clearance, improve focal absorption on radiologic images, and reduce the demand for HFNC oxygen therapy in hospitalization. | Multiple antiviral medications used concurrently that makes interpretation a bit difficulty for specific antiviral. However, addition of arbidol was beneficial. |
| Empirical regimen includes Interferon-α, lopinavir/ritonavir, favipiravir, Ribavirin, Darunavir/cobicistat (36 in group ER and 39 in group A + ER). | This article is not peer reviewed yet. | ||
| Upon results, group A + ER had significantly higher virologic conversion comparing to group ER (59.2% vs 40.3%; P = 0.048) and numerically rate of stable virologic conversion without significant difference (2.46.9% vs. 30.6%, P = 0.079). | |||
| Additionally, rate of radiologic recovery was higher in group A + ER compared to group ER (55.1% vs 32.2%, P = 0.016) and oxygen therapy was relatively fewer in group A + ER than in group ER (6.1% vs. 29%, P = 0.002. |
Trials/studies involving Ostalmovir.
| Study type | Trial outcome and design | Conclusion | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Case series [ | Out of 115 COVID-19 confirmed case, 5 patients found co-infected with influenza virus and followed up. | Patient with both COVID‐19 and influenza virus co-infection did not appear to show a more severe condition. | Small sized case series. |
| All patients received antiviral therapy (including Ostalmovir), antibacterial, and supportive therapy (when indicated). | Multiple therapies used, thus cannot confirmed the efficacy of Ostalmovir against COVID-19. | ||
| None of the patients taken to intensive care unit recovered and discharged from hospital with no death. | |||
| Descriptive study [ | Of 99 COVID-19 cases admitted to the hospital. 76% received antivirals (including Ostalmovir, ganciclovir, and lopinavir/ritonavir tablets. The duration of antiviral treatment was 3–14 days. While 70% of them treated with antibiotics. Upon results, 58% of patients remained hospitalized, 31% discharged, and 11% had died. | The infection of 2019-nCoV was of clustering onset, is more likely to infect older men with comorbidities, and can result in severe and even fatal respiratory diseases such as ARDS. | Retrospective case series with small sample size not enough to support clinical decision. |