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Favipiravir in early symptomatic COVID-19, a randomised placebo-controlled trial.

McMahon JH, Lau JSY, Coldham A, Roney J, Hagenauer M, Price S, Bryant M, Garlick J, Paterson A, Lee SJ, O'Bryan J, Hearps A, Tachedjian G, Pinskier H, Phillips C, Garrow S, Pinskier N, Melvin R, Blakeway L, Wisniewski JA, Byers S, Badoordeen GZ, Pereira S, Pragastis K, Trubiano JA, Chua KYL, Kainer M, Molton JS, Gardiner BJ, Pierce AB, Cheng A, Rogers BA, Peleg AY

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  • Journal EClinicalMedicine

  • Published 20 Oct 2022

  • Volume 54

  • Pagination 101703

  • DOI 10.1016/j.eclinm.2022.101703

Abstract

with evidence of clinical benefit in open label trials. Placebo controlled studies of people with early symptomatic COVID-19 with regular assessments of SARS-CoV-2 viral load can determine if it has an antiviral effect and improves clinical outcomes.

People with PCR-confirmed COVID-19 and 5 days or less of symptoms were randomised 1:1 to favipiravir 1800 mg on day 1, then 800 mg twice daily or matched placebo for 14 days. SARS-CoV-2 viral load was quantitated from second daily self-collected nose-throat swabs while receiving study drug. The primary endpoint was time to virological cure defined as 2 successive swabs negative for SARS-CoV-2 by PCR and secondary outcomes were progression of disease severity, symptom resolution and safety.

=27 placebo). Sensitivity analyses where the definition of virological cure was changed to: a single negative PCR, exclude datapoints based on the presence or absence of human DNA in the swab, a SARS-CoV-2 viral load < 300 copies/mL being considered negative all demonstrated no difference between arms.

Favipiravir does not improve the time to virological cure or clinical outcomes and shows no evidence of an antiviral effect when treating early symptomatic COVID-19 infection.

The study was supported in part by grants from the Commonwealth Bank Australia, the Lord Mayor's Charitable Foundation, Melbourne Australia and the Orloff Family Charitable Trust, Melbourne, Australia. JHM is supported by the Medical Research Future Fund, AYP, JT are supported by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.