Literature DB >> 34159342

Molnupiravir, an Oral Antiviral Treatment for COVID-19.

William Fischer, Joseph J Eron, Wayne Holman, Myron S Cohen, Lei Fang, Laura J Szewczyk, Timothy P Sheahan, Ralph Baric, Katie R Mollan, Cameron R Wolfe, Elizabeth R Duke, Masoud M Azizad, Katyna Borroto-Esoda, David A Wohl, Amy James Loftis, Paul Alabanza, Felicia Lipansky, Wendy P Painter.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Easily distributed oral antivirals are urgently needed to treat coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19), prevent progression to severe illness, and block transmission of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). We report the results of a Phase 2a trial evaluating the safety, tolerability, and antiviral efficacy of molnupiravir in the treatment of COVID-19 ( ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04405570 ).
METHODS: Eligible participants included outpatients with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection and symptom onset within 7 days. Participants were randomized 1:1 to 200 mg molnupiravir or placebo, or 3:1 to molnupiravir (400 or 800 mg) or placebo, twice-daily for 5 days. Antiviral activity was assessed as time to undetectable levels of viral RNA by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and time to elimination of infectious virus isolation from nasopharyngeal swabs.
RESULTS: Among 202 treated participants, virus isolation was significantly lower in participants receiving 800 mg molnupiravir (1.9%) versus placebo (16.7%) at Day 3 (p = 0.02). At Day 5, virus was not isolated from any participants receiving 400 or 800 mg molnupiravir, versus 11.1% of those receiving placebo (p = 0.03). Time to viral RNA clearance was decreased and a greater proportion overall achieved clearance in participants administered 800 mg molnupiravir versus placebo (p = 0.01). Molnupiravir was generally well tolerated, with similar numbers of adverse events across all groups.
CONCLUSIONS: Molnupiravir is the first oral, direct-acting antiviral shown to be highly effective at reducing nasopharyngeal SARS-CoV-2 infectious virus and viral RNA and has a favorable safety and tolerability profile.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34159342      PMCID: PMC8219109          DOI: 10.1101/2021.06.17.21258639

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  medRxiv


  1 in total

1.  Poor humoral and T-cell response to two-dose SARS-CoV-2 messenger RNA vaccine BNT162b2 in cardiothoracic transplant recipients.

Authors:  René Schramm; Angelika Costard-Jäckle; Cornelius Knabbe; Jan Gummert; Rasmus Rivinius; Bastian Fischer; Benjamin Müller; Udo Boeken; Assad Haneya; Zdenek Provaznik
Journal:  Clin Res Cardiol       Date:  2021-07-09       Impact factor: 5.460

  1 in total

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