| Literature DB >> 33617533 |
Koichiro Suemori1, Masayuki Saijo2, Atsushi Yamanaka3, Daisuke Himeji3, Masafumi Kawamura4, Takashi Haku5, Michihiro Hidaka6, Chinatsu Kamikokuryo7, Yasuyuki Kakihana7, Taichi Azuma1, Katsuto Takenaka1, Toru Takahashi8, Akitsugu Furumoto9, Toshiyuki Ishimaru10, Masayuki Ishida11, Masahiko Kaneko12, Norimitsu Kadowaki13, Kenichi Ikeda14, Shigetoshi Sakabe15, Tomohiro Taniguchi16, Hiroki Ohge17, Takeshi Kurosu2, Tomoki Yoshikawa2, Masayuki Shimojima2, Masaki Yasukawa1.
Abstract
Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is a bunyavirus infection with high mortality. Favipiravir has shown effectiveness in preventing and treating SFTS virus (SFTSV) infection in animal models. A multicenter non-randomized, uncontrolled single arm trial was conducted to collect data on the safety and the effectiveness of favipiravir in treatment of SFTS patients. All participants received favipiravir orally (first-day loading dose of 1800 mg twice a day followed by 800 mg twice a day for 7-14 days in total). SFTSV RT-PCR and biochemistry tests were performed at designated time points. Outcomes were 28-day mortality, clinical improvement, viral load evolution, and adverse events (AEs). Twenty-six patients were enrolled, of whom 23 were analyzed. Four of these 23 patients died of multi-organ failure within one week (28-day mortality rate: 17.3%). Oral favipiravir was well tolerated in the surviving patients. AEs (abnormal hepatic function and insomnia) occurred in about 20% of the patients. Clinical symptoms improved in all patients who survived from a median of day 2 to day10. SFTSV RNA levels in the patients who died were significantly higher than those in the survivors (p = 0.0029). No viral genomes were detectable in the surviving patients a median of 8 days after favipiravir administration. The 28-day mortality rate in this study was lower than those of the previous studies in Japan. The high frequency of hepatic dysfunction as an AE was observed. However, it was unclear whether this was merely a side effect of favipiravir, because liver disorders are commonly seen in SFTS patients. The results of this trial support the effectiveness of favipiravir for patients with SFTS.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33617533 PMCID: PMC7899362 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0009103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727