Abstract
Objectives
To evaluate the effectiveness of Hydroxychloroquine Phosphate/Sulfate (200 mg orally 8 hourly thrice a day for 5 days), versus oseltamivir (75 mg orally twice a day for 5 days), and versus Azithromycin (500 mg orally daily on day 1, followed by 250 mg orally twice a day on days 2-5) alone and in combination (in all seven groups), in clearing the coronavirus (COVID-19) nucleic acid from throat and nasal swab and in bringing about clinical improvement on day 7 of follow-up (primary outcomes).
Trial Design
An adaptive design, set within a comprehensive cohort study, to permit flexibility in this fast-changing clinical and public health scenario. The randomized study will be a multicenter, multiarm, multistage, randomized controlled trial with a parallel design. An observation only cohort will emerge from those not consenting to randomization.
Participants
Eligible will be newly diagnosed patients, either hospitalized or in self-isolation, without any comorbidities or with controlled chronic medical conditions like diabetes mellitus and hypertension. Participants of any gender or age group having tested positive for COVID-19 on Real-Time qRT-PCR (Quantitative Reverse Transcription PCR) will be invited to take part in study at twelve centers across eight cities in Pakistan. Those pregnant or lactating, severely dyspneic or with respiratory distress, already undergoing treatment, and with serious comorbidities like liver or kidney failure will be excluded.
Intervention and Comparator
There will be a total of seven comparator groups: Each drug (Hydroxychloroquine Phosphate/Sulfate, Oseltamivir and Azithromycin) given as monotherapy (three groups); combinations of each of two drugs (three groups); and a final group on triple drug regimen.
Main Outcomes
The laboratory-based primary outcome will be turning the test negative for COVID-19 on qRT-PCR on day 7 of follow-up. The clinical primary outcome will be improvement from baseline of two points on a seven-category ordinal scale of clinical status on day 7 of follow-up.
Randomization
Participants will be randomized, maintaining concealment of allocation sequence, using a computer-generated random number list of variable block size into multiple intervention groups in the allocation ratio of 1:1 for all groups.
Blinding (masking)
This is an open label study, neither physician nor participants will be blinded.
Numbers to be randomized (sample size)
This is an adaptive design and parameters for formal sample size calculation in a new disease of a previously unknown virus are not available. Thus, the final sample size will be subjected to periodic reviews at each stage of adaptive design and subsequent advice of National Data Safety & Management Board (NDSMB) notified by Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan.
Trial Status
Protocol Version 1.7 dated July 5, 2020. By July 03, 2020, the trial had recruited a total of about 470 participants across 12 centers after approval from the National Bioethics Committee and Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan. Recruitment started on April 20, 2020. The recruitment is expected to continue for at least three months subject to review by the National Data Safety and Management Board (NDSMB) notified by Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan.
Trial Registration
Prospectively registered on 8 April 2020 at clinicaltrials.gov ID: NCT04338698
The full protocol is attached as an additional file, accessible from the Trials website (Additional file 1). In the interest in expediting dissemination of this material, the familiar formatting has been eliminated; this Letter serves as a summary of the key elements of the full protocol.
The study protocol has been reported in accordance with the Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Clinical Interventional Trials (SPIRIT) guidelines (Additional file 2).
Keywords: COVID-19, Randomised controlled trial, protocol, SARS-CoV-2, Hydroxychloroquine, Azithromycin, Oseltamivir, multi-center, adaptive, randomization
Supplementary information
Acknowledgements
- Authors acknowledge continuous support of Federal Task Force on Covid-19 under its Chairman Prof Atta ur Rahman
- Also thanking laboratory personnel and faculty at UHS in supporting this effort
- External Peer reviewer Prof Javier Zamora, Head of Clinical Biostatistics Unit, Hospital Ramon y Cajal, IRYCIS, Madrid Spain
- Professor Khan is Distinguished Investigator at University of Granada funded by the Beatriz Galindo (senior modality) program of the Spanish Ministry of Education.
Authors’ contributions
-JA, KSK, SA, WL wrote the Hypothesis or Comparator groups, Primary and Secondary Outcomes
-SA wrote Introduction, part of Methods and Ethical Approvals, adapted manuscript to SPIRIT Guidelines
-KSK, SA, WL wrote sections on Eligibility Criteria and Data Safety & Monitoring
-MS devised Dosage and Informed Consent Tool
-WL contributed with Sample Size Calculations, Data Analysis
The author(s) read and approved the final manuscript
Funding
All funding was arranged by University of Health Sciences (UHS) Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan. First three authors of this protocol are relevant faculty members of UHS and investigators of the study. Mr. Waqas Latif is Data Analyst at UHS. Prof Khalid Saeed Khan is a Distinguished Investigator from University of Granada Spain and actively supported the study as representative of Federal task Force on Covid-19. Development and maintenance of the electronic data collection module was done with active support of IT Department at UHS Lahore. The University also arranged logistics to ensure provision of study medicines to all study centers. It also got approved the study from relevant national institutions upon payment of requisite processing fee. UHS will be responsible for future publication and data analysis as advised by NDSMB, along with the content at theprotect.com.pk. Shehnoor Azhar (Assistant Professor Public Health, UHS Lahore) trained site teams in Good Clinical Practices.
Availability of data and materials
NDSMB will be the custodian of the final trial data and investigators will give an undertaking for not using it in part of whole for any purpose without prior written authorization from the NDSMB.
Subject to NDSMB written approval, any part or whole of the protocol, site-specific data, or the entire dataset could be made available to the public for academic use only.
Ethics approval
The proposed study is approved by the National Bioethics Committee of Pakistan on April 22, 2020 (reference No.4-87/NBC-471-COVID-19-05/20/) and IRBs at most of the participating sites. Remaining sites have endorsed the ethics approval of both University of Health Sciences Lahore and National Bioethics Committee (NBC). Participants’ informed consent is intended to be sought on printed proforma designed in local language and no individual under the age of 18 years is to be enrolled.
Certified that this trial has received ethical approval from the appropriate ethical committee as described above
Consent for publication
Not Applicable
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests
Footnotes
Publisher’s Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Change history
2/15/2022
A Correction to this paper has been published: 10.1186/s13063-022-06080-8
Change history
8/22/2020
A Correction to this paper has been published: 10.1186/s13063-020-04697-1
Contributor Information
Javed Akram, Email: jakram@gmail.com.
Shehnoor Azhar, Email: shehnoor.azhar@gmail.com.
Muhammad Shahzad, Email: shehzad912@gmail.com.
Waqas Latif, Email: waqas341@gmail.com.
Khalid Saeed Khan, Email: profkkhan@gmail.com.
Supplementary information
Supplementary information accompanies this paper at 10.1186/s13063-020-04616-4.
Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Supplementary Materials
Data Availability Statement
NDSMB will be the custodian of the final trial data and investigators will give an undertaking for not using it in part of whole for any purpose without prior written authorization from the NDSMB.
Subject to NDSMB written approval, any part or whole of the protocol, site-specific data, or the entire dataset could be made available to the public for academic use only.