| Literature DB >> 33089717 |
F Carrouel1, L S Gonçalves2, M P Conte3, G Campus4, J Fisher5, L Fraticelli1,6, E Gadea-Deschamps7, L Ottolenghi8, D Bourgeois1.
Abstract
The oral cavity, an essential part of the upper aerodigestive tract, is believed to play an important role in the pathogenicity and transmission of SARS-CoV-2. The identification of targeted antiviral mouth rinses to reduce salivary viral load would contribute to reducing the COVID-19 pandemic. While awaiting the results of significant clinical studies, which to date do not exist, the commercial availability of mouth rinses leads us to search among them for reagents that would have specific antiviral properties with respect to SARS-CoV-2. The challenges facing this target were examined for 7 reagents found in commercially available mouth rinses and listed on the ClinicalTrials.gov website: povidone-iodine, chlorhexidine, hydrogen peroxide, cyclodextrin, Citrox, cetylpyridinium chloride, and essential oils. Because SARS-CoV-2 is an enveloped virus, many reagents target the outer lipid membrane. Moreover, some of them can act on the capsid by denaturing proteins. Until now, there has been no scientific evidence to recommend mouth rinses with an anti-SARS-CoV-2 effect to control the viral load in the oral cavity. This critical review indicates that current knowledge of these reagents would likely improve trends in salivary viral load status. This finding is a strong sign to encourage clinical research for which quality protocols are already available in the literature.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; clinical trial; mouthwashes; oral; saliva; viral load
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33089717 PMCID: PMC7582358 DOI: 10.1177/0022034520967933
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dent Res ISSN: 0022-0345 Impact factor: 6.116
Product Information of the Main over-the-Counter Oral Rinses or Mouth Rinses according to Their Active Ingredients.
| Active Ingredient | Package Name | Strength | Manufacturer Name |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chlorhexidine (187 studies[ | Paroex® | 0.12% | Sunstar Americas, Inc., USA |
| Perio-Aid® Intensive Care | 0.12% | Dentaid SL, Spain | |
| Kloroben® | 0.12% | Kloroben, Turkey | |
| Corsodyl Care® | 0.20% | SmithKline Beecham Consumer Healthcare, UK | |
| Periogard® | 0.12% | Colgate Oral Pharmaceuticals, Inc., USA | |
| Curasept® | 0.20% | Curasept S.p.A., Italy | |
| Peridex™ Oral Rinse | 0.12% | 3M™ Espe Dental Products, USA | |
| Eludrilpro® | 0.10% | Pierre Fabre Oral Care, France | |
| Avohex® Gluconate | 0.20% | Middle East Pharmaceutical Industries Co. Ltd., Saudi Arabia | |
| Acclean Oral Rinse | 0.12% | Xttrium Laboratories, Inc, USA; Henry Schein, Inc, USA | |
| Chlorhexidine Gluconate 1 | 0.12% |
[ | |
| Cetylpyridinium chloride (15 studies[ | Crest® Pro-Health® Multi-Protection | 0.07% to 0.1% | The Procter & Gamble Manufacturing Company, USA |
| Perio·Aid® Intensive Care | 0.12% | Dentaid SL, Spain | |
| Colgate Total—Colgate Zero | 0.025%, 0.075% | Colgate-Palmolive Company, USA | |
| Assured Fresh Mint Oral Health Rinse | 0.07% | Greenbrier International, Inc., USA | |
| Citrox (1 study[ | Curaprox Perio Plus Regenerate® | 0.01% | Curaden AG, Switzerland |
| Cyclodextrin (1 study[ | Curaprox Perio Plus Regenerate® | 0.1% | Curaden AG, Switzerland |
| Essential oils (25 studies[ | Listerine Professional Gum Therapy® | Johnson & Johnson, USA | |
| Listerine® Zero™ | Johnson & Johnson, USA | ||
| Cool Mint Listerine® | Johnson & Johnson, USA | ||
| Decapinol® | Sinclair Pharma Ltd., UK | ||
| Hydrogen peroxide (8 studies[ | Crest® Oral-B Mouth Sore Mild Mint | 1.5% | The Procter & Gamble Manufacturing Company, USA |
| 3D White™ Glamourous White Multi-care Whitening | >1% | The Procter & Gamble Manufacturing Company, USA | |
| Colgate® Peroxyl® Mouth Sore Rinse | 1.5% | Colgate Oral Pharmaceuticals, Inc., USA | |
| Oral B® Mouth Sore Special Care Rinse | 1.5% | The Procter & Gamble Manufacturing Company, USA | |
| Sore Mouth Cleanser® | 1.5% | Vi-jon, Inc., USA | |
| Medline® Rinse | 1.5% | Medline Industries, Inc., USA | |
| Perox-a-mint Solution | 1.5% | Sage Products LLC, USA | |
| Peroxy Shield Mouth Sore | 1.5% | Dental Technologies, Inc., USA | |
| Povidone-iodine (1 study[ | Betadine® | 1% | Pfizer Ltd., USA |
| Halodine® Oral Rinse | 1.7% | Halodine LLC, USA | |
| Povidone Iodine Gargle® | 0.5% | Humco Holding Group, Inc., USA | |
| Betadine Gargle | 0.5% | Avrio Health L.P., USA |
This table is a synthesis of data obtained from electronic research organized in the databases ClinicalTrials.gov, Drug Information Portal (National Institutes of Health), National Drug Code List, and PubMed. The following MeSH and non-MeSH search terms were used to encompass every type of over-the-counter (OTC) mouthrinse or mouthwash: (“mouth rinse” [MeSH terms] OR “mouthwashes” [All fields]) AND (“Chlorhexidine” [MeSH terms] OR (“Cetylpyridinium chloride” [All fields] OR “essential oils” [All fields] OR “hydrogen peroxide” [All fields] OR “Povidone-iodine” [All fields] OR (“Citrox” [All fields] OR “Cyclodextrin” [All fields]). When the product name was missing, contact by e-mail or ResearchGate (www.researchgate.net) was made with the principal investigator. This list of OTC drugs is not exhaustive.
Number of clinical studies identified in ClinicalTrials.gov.
Twenty-four OTC drugs use the same package name. The list of manufacturers’ names is available at https://ndclist.com.
Figure 1.Current status of clinical trials on the use of mouth rinse for COVID-19 listed on the site ClinicalTrials.gov (Find Trials 2020).
Antiviral Activity of Reagents in Mouth Rinses.
| Antiviral Activity | Antiviral Activity against SARS-CoV-2 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Active Ingredient | In Silico | In Vitro | In Vivo | In Silico | In Vitro | In Vivo |
| Chlorhexidine |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| CMV | HSV-1 | |||||
| FluV | ||||||
| HBV | ||||||
| HIV-1 | ||||||
| HSV-1 | ||||||
| Poliovirus | ||||||
| HCoV 229E | ||||||
| Cetylpyridinium chloride |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| HBV | Influenza A, B viruses | |||||
| HSV-1 | ||||||
| Influenza A, B viruses | Respiratory viruses | |||||
| Citrox |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| HSV-1 | Enterovirus A71 | Influenza A virus | ||||
| HBV | ||||||
| Influenza virus | ||||||
| RSV | ||||||
| Zika virus | ||||||
| Cyclodextrin |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Influenza A virus | Caprine | Influenza A virus | ||||
| Parainfluenza virus | ||||||
| Type 3 | ||||||
| EV-D68 | ||||||
| HCV | ||||||
| Influenza A virus | ||||||
| Essential oils |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Coxsackie virus | ||||||
| HAdV | ||||||
| HCMV | ||||||
| HIV | ||||||
| HSV-1-2 | ||||||
| Influenza virus A (H1N1) | ||||||
| SARS-CoV | ||||||
| VSV | ||||||
| YF | ||||||
| Hydrogen peroxide |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Coronavirus | ||||||
| Influenza A, B viruses | ||||||
| Povidone-iodine |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Coxsackie virus, rhinovirus | Adenovirus | |||||
| EBOV | Norovirus | |||||
| HAdV | ||||||
| HIV | ||||||
| HPV | ||||||
| HRV | ||||||
| HSV-1 | ||||||
| Influenza virus | ||||||
| Influenza virus A (H1N1) | ||||||
| Measles | ||||||
| MERS-CoV | ||||||
| Mumps | ||||||
| MVA | ||||||
| Poliovirus (1,3) | ||||||
| Polyomavirus | ||||||
| Rubella | ||||||
| SARS-CoV | ||||||
The electronic research was organized in the PubMed database. The following MeSH and non-MeSH search terms were used: (“Chlorhexidine” [MeSH terms] OR (“Cetylpyridinium chloride” [All fields] OR “essential oils” [All fields] OR “hydrogen peroxide” [All fields] OR “Povidone-iodine” [All fields] OR (“Citrox” [All fields] OR “Cyclodextrin” [All fields] AND (“Virucidal” [MeSH terms] OR (“Antiviral” [All fields]). The following codification was used: 5 articles or more listed in PubMed (), between 3 and 5 articles listed in PubMed (), 1 or 2 articles listed in PubMed (), no articles listed in PubMed (). CMV, cytomegalovirus; EBOV, Ebola virus; EV-D68, enterovirus D68; H3N2 (FluV), human influenza virus A; HAdV, human adenovirus; HBV, hepatitis B; HCoV, human coronavirus; HCV, hepatitis C; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus type 1; HRV, human rotavirus; HSV-1, herpes simplex virus 1; MERS-CoV, middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus; MVA, modified vaccinia virus Ankara; RSV, respiratory syncytium virus; SARS-CoV, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus.