| Literature DB >> 33442304 |
Pasquale Pagliano1, Giuliana Scarpati2, Carmine Sellitto3, Valeria Conti3, Anna Maria Spera1, Tiziana Ascione4, Ornella Piazza2, Amelia Filippelli3.
Abstract
The coronavirus infectious disease-2019 (COVID-19) has overwhelmed like a shock wave in a completely unprepared world. Despite coronavirus infections were involved in previous epidemic outbreaks, no antiviral agent was developed for specific treatment. As a consequence, since the beginning of this pandemic, both repositioned and experimental drugs were used to treat the infected patients without evidence of clinical efficacy. Just based on experience coming from the use of antiviral agents to treat other viruses (eg, lopinavir/ritonavir, remdesivir) and supposed antiviral or immunomodulatory activities of drugs with no approved antiviral indications (eg hydroxychloroquine, tocilizumab), clinicians have faced the ongoing pandemic. Currently, after about 9 months from the COVID-19 spread, there is still no antiviral agent capable of ensuring the cure of this syndrome. Clinical trials are beginning to confirm the benefits of some drugs, while for other compounds, efficacy and safety have not yet been confirmed. Randomized clinical trials (RCT) have denied or downsized the beneficial effects attributed to certain molecules, such as aminoquinolines, largely used in clinical practice at the beginning of COVID-19 spread. Conversely, at the same time, they have provided evidence for unexpected effectiveness of other agents that have been underutilized, such as steroids, which were not used in SARS treatment because of the threatened effect on viral replication. Evidence deriving from pathologic studies have demonstrated that the prothrombotic effects of SARS-CoV-2 can be prevented by heparin prophylaxis, underlining the need for personalized treatment for patients with severe disease. The main aim of this review is to synthesize the available information and evidence on both repositioned and experimental drugs for the treatment of COVID-19, focusing on the need to exercise caution on the use of unproven medical therapies.Entities:
Keywords: ARDS; SARS-CoV-2; chloroquine; heparin; remdesivir; steroids
Year: 2021 PMID: 33442304 PMCID: PMC7800714 DOI: 10.2147/JEP.S255209
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Pharmacol ISSN: 1179-1454
Figure 1Mechanisms of activity of main drugs proposed for COVID-19 treatment.
Main Studies Investigating CQ/HCQ and Remdesivir Efficacy Against COVID-19
| Drugs | Clinical Trials (N.)* | Main Clinical Trials Published (Reference) | Clinical Efficacy | Enrolled Patients |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chloroquine/hydroxychloroquine | 335 | 7 | Yes | 491 |
| 8 | Yes | 31 | ||
| 10 | Yes | 36 | ||
| 11 | No | 181 | ||
| 12 | Yes | 440 | ||
| 14 | Yes | 8075 | ||
| 15 | No | 821 | ||
| Remdesivir | 49 | 17 | Yes | 61 |
| 20 | Yes | 397 | ||
| 21 | Yes | 1063 |
Note: *Accessed 01/09/2020 clinicaltrials.gov.
Main Studies Investigating Clinical Efficacy of Drugs Against COVID-19
| Other Drugs | Clinical Trials* | Clinical Trials Published (Reference) | Clinical Efficacy | Enrolled Patients |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Favipiravir | 34 | 24 | Yes | 5 |
| 25 | Yes | 240 | ||
| Lopinavir/ritonavir | 83 | 28 | No | 199 |
| 29 | NA | 127 | ||
| Darunavir/cobicistat | 6 | 33 | No | 30 |
| Umifenovir | 10 | 39 | Yes | 86 |
| 40 | Yes | 504 | ||
| Sofosbuvir | 8 | 43 | Yes | 62 |
| Ribavirin | 12 | 29 | Yes | 127 |
| Penciclovir | 0 | / | / | / |
| Camostat mesilate | 11 | / | / | / |
| Nafamostat mesilate | 4 | / | / | / |
| Azithromycin | 112 | 10 | Yes | 36 |
| 12 | NA | 440 | ||
| Enoxaparin | 39 | / | / | / |
| Nitazoxanide | 19 | / | / | / |
| Ivermectin | 37 | / | / | / |
| Famotidine | 5 | 89 | Yes | 10 |
| 90 | Yes | 1620 | ||
| Dexamethasone | 29 | 98 | Yes | 2104 |
| Tocilizumab | 68 | 107 | Yes | 172 |
| Baricitinib | 14 | / | / | / |
| Eculizumab/ruxolitinib | 1 | 112 | Yes | 17 |
Note: *Accessed 01/09/2020 clinicaltrials.gov.
Abbreviation: NA, not available.
Molecules Showing Therapeutic Potential in Small Clinical Trials (Curcumin, Resveratrol) or in vitro (AR-12)
| Promising Molecules | Hypothetical Mechanism of Action | References |
|---|---|---|
| AR-12 | It increases virus protein degradation, preventing virus reproduction | Rayner et al |
| Resveratrol and copper | Resveratrol is an antioxidant nutraceutical that acts as a pro-oxidant in presence of copper, generating highly unstable free-radicals which can degrade cell-free chromatin | Mittra et al |
| Curcumin | Curcumin has anti- inflammatory properties and causes inhibition of PAK1, AP1 and NF-κB | Nemati et al |