Oral famotidine versus placebo in non-hospitalised patients with COVID-19: a randomised, double-blind, data-intense, phase 2 clinical trial

Author:

Brennan Christina M,Nadella Sandeep,Zhao Xiang,Dima Richard J,Jordan-Martin Nicole,Demestichas Breanna R,Kleeman Sam O,Ferrer Miriam,von Gablenz Eva Carlotta,Mourikis Nicholas,Rubin Michael E,Adnani Harsha,Lee Hassal,Ha TaehoonORCID,Prum Soma,Schleicher Cheryl B,Fox Sharon S,Ryan Michael G,Pili Christina,Goldberg Gary,Crawford James M,Goodwin Sara,Zhang Xiaoyue,Preall Jonathan B,Costa Ana S H,Conigliaro Joseph,Masci Joseph R,Yang Jie,Tuveson David AORCID,Tracey Kevin J,Janowitz TobiasORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveWe assessed whether famotidine improved inflammation and symptomatic recovery in outpatients with mild to moderate COVID-19.DesignRandomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, fully remote, phase 2 clinical trial (NCT04724720) enrolling symptomatic unvaccinated adult outpatients with confirmed COVID-19 between January 2021 and April 2021 from two US centres. Patients self-administered 80 mg famotidine (n=28) or placebo (n=27) orally three times a day for 14 consecutive days. Endpoints were time to (primary) or rate of (secondary) symptom resolution, and resolution of inflammation (exploratory).ResultsOf 55 patients in the intention-to-treat group (median age 35 years (IQR: 20); 35 women (64%); 18 African American (33%); 14 Hispanic (26%)), 52 (95%) completed the trial, submitting 1358 electronic symptom surveys. Time to symptom resolution was not statistically improved (p=0.4). Rate of symptom resolution was improved for patients taking famotidine (p<0.0001). Estimated 50% reduction of overall baseline symptom scores were achieved at 8.2 days (95% CI: 7 to 9.8 days) for famotidine and 11.4 days (95% CI: 10.3 to 12.6 days) for placebo treated patients. Differences were independent of patient sex, race or ethnicity. Five self-limiting adverse events occurred (famotidine, n=2 (40%); placebo, n=3 (60%)). On day 7, fewer patients on famotidine had detectable interferon alpha plasma levels (p=0.04). Plasma immunoglobulin type G levels to SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid core protein were similar between both arms.ConclusionsFamotidine was safe and well tolerated in outpatients with mild to moderate COVID-19. Famotidine led to earlier resolution of symptoms and inflammation without reducing anti-SARS-CoV-2 immunity. Additional randomised trials are required.

Funder

La Caixa Foundation Fellowship

NIH

MRC CU Research Studentship

Starr Centennial Scholarship at CSHL

Cancer Center Support Grant

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Gastroenterology

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