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      Clinical antiviral efficacy of favipiravir in early COVID-19 (PLATCOV): an open- label, randomised, controlled adaptive platform trial

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          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 log 10 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.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Research Square
          April 05 2023
          Affiliations
          [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
          Article
          10.21203/rs.3.rs-2675703/v1
          48f8bf70-0e8f-40e6-8751-3657cd27667d
          © 2023

          https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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