Author:
Silveira Marcelo Augusto Duarte,Menezes Matheus de Alencar,de Souza Sergio Pinto,Galvão Erica Batista dos Santos,Berretta Andresa Aparecida,Caldas Juliana,Teixeira Maurício Brito,Gomes Marcel Miranda Dantas,Damiani Lucas Petri,Bahiense Bruno Andrade,Cabral Julia Barros,De Oliveira Cicero Wandson Luiz Macedo,Mascarenhas Talita Rocha,Pinheiro Priscila Carvalho Guedes,Alves Milena Souza,de Melo Rodrigo Morel Vieira,Leite Flávia Mendes,Nonaka Carolina Kymie Vasques,Souza Bruno Solano de Freitas,Baptista Nathália Ursoli,Teles Flávio,da Guarda Suzete Farias,Mendes Ana Verena Almeida,Passos Rogério da Hora
Abstract
AbstractSARS-CoV-2 and its different variants caused a “wave and wave” pandemic pattern. During the first wave we demonstrated that standardized Brazilian green propolis extract (EPP-AF®) reduces length of hospital stay in adult patients with COVID-19. Afterwards, we decided to evaluate the impact of EPP-AF in hospitalized patients during the third wave of the pandemic. BeeCovid2 was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial in hospitalized COVID-19 adult patients. Patients were allocated to receive an oral dose of 900 mg/day of EPP-AF® or placebo for 10 days. The primary outcome was length of hospital stay. Secondary outcomes included safety, secondary infection rate, duration of oxygen therapy dependency, acute kidney injury and need for intensive care. Patients were followed up for 28 days after admission. We enrolled 188 patients; 98 were assigned to the propolis group and 90 to the placebo group. The post-intervention length of hospital stay was of 6.5 ± 6.0 days in the propolis group versus 7.7 ± 7.1 days in the control group (95% CI − 0.74 [− 1.94 to 0.42]; p = 0.22). Propolis did not have significant impact on the need for oxygen supplementation or frequency of AKI. There was a significant difference in the incidence of secondary infection between groups, with 6.1% in the propolis group versus 18.9% in the control group (95% CI − 0.28 [0.1–0.76], p = 0.01). The use of EPP-AF was considered safe and associated with a decrease in secondary infections. The drug was not associated with a significant reduction in length of hospital stay. ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04800224).
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
2 articles.
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