Clinical antiviral efficacy of favipiravir in early COVID-19 (PLATCOV): an open- label, randomised, controlled adaptive platform trial
Author:
Luvira Viravarn1, Schilling William HK2, Jittamala Podjanee1, Watson James A1, Boyd Simon2, Siripoon Tanaya1, Ngamprasertchai Thundon1, Almeida Pedro J3, Ekkapongpisit Maneerat2, Cruz Cintia2, Callery James J2, Singh Shivani2, Tuntipaiboontana Runch2, Kruabkontho Varaporn2, Ngernseng Thatsanun2, Tubprasert Jaruwan2, Abdad Mohammad Yazid2, Keayarsa Srisuda1, Madmanee Wanassanan2, Aguiar Renato S3, Santos Franciele M3, Hanboonkunupakarn Pongtorn4, Hanboonkunupakarn Borimas1, Poovorawan Kittiyod1, Imwong Mallika1, Taylor Walter RJ2, Chotivanich Vasin5, Chotivanich Kesinee1, Pukrittayakamee Sasithon1, Dondorp Arjen M2, Day Nicholas PJ2, Teixeira Mauro M3, Piyaphanee Watcharapong1, Phumratanaprapin Weerapong1, White Nicholas J2
Affiliation:
1. Mahidol University 2. Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit 3. Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais 4. Bangplee Hospital, Ministry of Public Health 5. Navamindradhiraj University
Abstract
Abstract
Background:
Favipiravir, an anti-influenza drug, has in vitro antiviral activity against SARS-CoV-2. Clinical trial evidence to date is inconclusive. Favipiravir has been recommended for the treatment of COVID-19 in some countries.
Methods:
In a multicentre open-label, randomised, controlled, adaptive platform trial, low-risk adult patients with early symptomatic COVID-19 were randomised to one of ten treatment arms including high dose oral favipiravir (3.6g on day 0 followed by 1.6g daily to complete 7 days treatment) or no study drug. The primary outcome assessed in a modified intention-to-treat population (mITT) was the rate of viral clearance (derived under a linear mixed-effects model from the daily log10 viral densities in standardised duplicate oropharyngeal swab eluates taken daily over 8 days [18 swabs per patient]). The safety population included all patients who received at least one dose of the allocated intervention. This ongoing adaptive platform trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05041907).
Results:
In the final analysis, the mITT population contained data from 114 patients randomised to favipiravir and 126 patients randomised concurrently to no study drug. Under the linear mixed-effects model fitted to all oropharyngeal viral density estimates in the first 8 days from randomisation (4,318 swabs), there was no difference in the rate of viral clearance between patients administered favipiravir and patients receiving no study drug -1% (95% CI: -14 to 14% change). High dose favipiravir was well tolerated.
Interpretation:
Favipiravir does not accelerate viral clearance in early symptomatic COVID-19.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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