| Literature DB >> 35933528 |
Ishnoor Kaur1, Tapan Behl2, Aayush Sehgal1, Sukhbir Singh3, Neelam Sharma3, Vetriselvan Subramanian4, Shivkanya Fuloria5, Neeraj Kumar Fuloria5, Mahendran Sekar6, Hamed Ghaleb Dailah7, Amal M Alsubayiel8, Saurabh Bhatia9,10, Ahmed Al-Harrasi9, Lotfi Aleya11, Simona Bungau12.
Abstract
The 2019 outbreak of corona virus disease began from Wuhan (China), transforming into a leading pandemic, posing an immense threat to the global population. The WHO coined the term nCOVID-19 for the disease on 11th February, 2020 and the International Committee of Taxonomy of Viruses named it SARS-CoV-2, on account of its similarity with SARS-CoV-1 of 2003. The infection is associated with fever, cough, pneumonia, lung damage, and ARDS along with clinical implications of lung opacities. Brief understanding of the entry target of virus, i.e., ACE2 receptors has enabled numerous treatment options as discussed in this review. The manuscript provides a holistic picture of treatment options in COVID-19, such as non-specific anti-viral drugs, immunosuppressive agents, anti-inflammatory candidates, anti-HCV, nucleotide inhibitors, antibodies and anti-parasitic, RNA-dependent RNA polymerase inhibitors, anti-retroviral, vitamins and hormones, JAK inhibitors, and blood plasma therapy. The text targets to enlist the investigations conducted on all the above categories of drugs, with respect to the COVID-19 pandemic, to accelerate their significance in hindering the disease progression. The data collected primarily targets recently published articles and most recent records of clinical trials, focusing on the last 10-year database. The current review provides a comprehensive view on the critical need of finding a suitable treatment for the currently prevalent COVID-19 disease, and an opportunity for the researchers to investigate the varying possibilities to find and optimized treatment approach to mitigate and ameliorate the chaos created by the pandemic worldwide.Entities:
Keywords: ACE-2; Anti-viral drugs; Blood plasma therapy; Corona virus; Pandemic; SARS-CoV-2
Year: 2022 PMID: 35933528 PMCID: PMC9362373 DOI: 10.1007/s11356-022-22345-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ISSN: 0944-1344 Impact factor: 5.190
Fig. 1Mechanism of entry of SARS-CoV-2 in host cell
Optimum drug categories, their candidates, and mechanism against COVID-19
| Category | Drug | Features | Action mechanism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-specific anti-virals | IL-2 | Cytokine signaling molecule | Elevation in number of CD8 + T cells, NK cells and CD4 + T cells | (“Chictr” |
| Ig | Fc receptor activation blocker | Reduction in infection progression, dependent on antibody; increased endogenous Nabs | (Cao et al. | |
| INFβ-1a | Cytokine signaling molecule | Increased cytoplasmic enzymes; ameliorated mRNA translation and synthesis of proteins | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| INFβ-1b | Cytokine in INF-family | Increased cytoplasmic enzymes; ameliorated mRNA translation and synthesis of proteins | (Hung et al. | |
| CYNK-001 | Cryopreserved allogenic, NK cell therapy, derived from placenta | Elevated number of CD56 + /CD3- NK cells | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Baloxavir marboxil | Cap snatcher blocker | Deceased level of endonuclease, dependent on viral cap | (Lou et al. | |
| Broad-spectrum anti-virals | Arbidol | Direct anti-viral, targeting host | Reduction in membrane haemagglutinin fusion | (“Smartpatients” |
| Remdesivir | Adenosine analog | Reduction in viral replication; curbed RNA polymerase | (Scavone et al. | |
| Favipiravir | Blocker of RNA polymerase | Decreased RdRp | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Galidesivir | Adenosine analog | Reduced viral RNA polymerase | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Anti-retrovirals | Azvudine | Nucleoside analog | Reduction in reverse transcriptase and viral replication | (“Chictr” |
| Darunavir and cobicistat | Protease inhibitor | Reduction in Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Danoprevir | Protease inhibitor | Reduction in transcription and replication of viral particles | (Chen et al. | |
| Lopinavir and ritonavir | Protease inhibitor | Ritonavir-mediated reduction in Cytochrome P450; curbed half life of lopinavir | (Cao et al. | |
| ASC09 | Protease inhibitor | Hindered proteolytic cleavage | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Anti-malarials | Hydroxy-chloroquine | Anti-malarial | Decreases ACE-2 glycosylation; when coupled with remdesivir, decreases viral replication | (“Clinicaltrials” |
| Antibiotics and anti-parasitics | Carrimycin | Polyether antibiotic | Prevents infection from fungi, yeast, gram positive bacteria and mycoplasma | (“Clinicaltrials” |
| Ivermectin | Anti-parasitic | Decreased viral replication | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Azithromycin | Macrolide antibiotic | Inhibits internalization into the host, during early infection stages | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Suramin sodium | Treatment of trypanosomiasis and onchocerciasis | Decreased ACE2 glycosylation; curbed quinone reductase 2 | (“Chictr” | |
| Doxycycline | Semi-synthetic tetracycline derivative | Reduced viral replication and IL-6 levels | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Dihydroartemisinine and piperaquine | Viral Fc receptor activation blocker | Interaction between haem iron and peroxide bridge accounts for anti-viral action | (“Chictr” | |
| Anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive agents (non-specific) | Ibuprofen | NSAID | Reduction in COX and PGs | (“Clinicaltrials” |
| Corticosteroids | Immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory | Curbed inflammation and regulation of immune system | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Naproxen | NSAID | Retards COX activity | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Thalidomide | Sedative and immunosuppressant | Reduced TNF-α and cell-surface adhesion molecules | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Leflunomide | Immunosuppressant and DMARD | Suppressed dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase enzyme, tyrosine kinase enzyme; reduction in transcription factors in the cell | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Colchicine | Antigout and anti-inflammatory | Retarded microtubule assembly; decreased chemotaxis and LTs; reduced activation of inflammasome | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Vitamins | Vitamin C | Antioxidant potential | Mitigated respiratory failure during intubation; decreased inflammation; curbed accumulation of neutrophils in lungs | (“Clinicaltrials” |
| Vitamin D | Immune system modulator | Decreased RAS and lung damage | (“Clinicaltrials” | |
| Vitamin D3 | Immune system modulator | Decreased lung damage | (“Clinicaltrials” |
Fig. 2Therapeutic agents ameliorating events propagating the COVID-19 infection
Result analysis of arbidol and LPV/r combinations and LPV/r alone
| Result | Combination group (oral administration of oral arbidol and LPV/r combination) | Monotherapy candidates (administered with oral LPV/r alone) |
|---|---|---|
| No SARS-CoV-2 detection after 7 days | 75% patients | 35% patients |
| No SARS-CoV-2 detection after 14 days | 94% patients | 52.9% patients |
| Improved chest CT scan reports | 69% patients | 295 patients |
Fig. 3Schematic representation of the convalescent plasma therapy in COVID-19
A brief description of lessons learnt from the COVID-19 pandemic of 2019
| Current issues | Events | Consequences | Lessons learnt |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delay in travel restrictions | Aviation services prevailed till a month after the outbreak with negligible screening focus at the airports | People from China entered multiple countries and transmitted the infection | Screening of citizens at the airport is extremely important and should be implemented at the earliest |
| Misinformation among the public | Rumors and misinformation due to lack of transparency | Racism and unsuitable precautions prevailed | Transparency as well as open access to all information is necessary |
| Lack of transparency | Intimidation of health professionals who recognized the disease initially | Information release delay | Clear, transparent policies should be developed |
| Emergency announcement delay | The declaration of the health emergency, globally, was done on 30th January, 2020, a month late from the China outbreak | The disease severity was not able to reach the globe on time | The treatment potential should be broadcasted earlier |
| Quarantine delay | Quarantine was delayed by one whole month in China | Rapid infection spread | Quarantine the susceptible areas as soon as possible |
| R & D | Lack of funding | A global pandemic has occurred causing deaths of thousands of people | Proper investigation and R & D protocol needs to be followed |
| Problems with healthcare management | Even the best hospital system could not facilitate viral control | Rapid transmission | Primary and community health care should be implemented |
| Viral mutations | Development of genetic variants | Elevation transmission and propagation | Comprehensive genomic surveillance program should be implemented; resourceful labs with expert staff; Computation tools and techniques |