Atovaquone |
Unknown mechanism of action but hypothesized to exert
antiviral activity through binding of SARS-CoV-2 spike protein
[90] and potential
modulation of cellular nucleotide pools, thus disrupting viral
replication [91].
Identified as a potential candidate with activity against SARS-CoV-2 via
computational molecular docking simulations due to its capability for
spike protein binding [90].
A double-blind, RCT has been completed evaluating (atovaquone plus SOC)
vs. (placebo plus SOC) with results pending (NCT04456153) |
Chloroquine (CQ) or hydroxychloroquine
(HCQ) ± azithromycin |
Chloroquine, hydroxychloroquine (hydroxyl analog of
chloroquine) and azithromycin have shown in vitro activity against
SARS-CoV-2 in infected Vero E6 cell [92, 93].
Also believed to have immunomodulatory activity which could
theoretically benefit patients with COVID-19. Multiple large
retrospective studies and RCTs have shown no convincing benefit of CQ or
HCQ in treatment [94–96] or prophylaxis [97, 98] of
COVID-19. Similarly, benefit was not demonstrated in outpatients with
COVID-19 [99, 100]. The combination of CQ/HCQ with
azithromycin is also associated with increased risk for cardiovascular
toxicity (e.g., QTc prolongation) |
Famotidine |
Famotidine is a H2-receptor antagonist hypothesized to inhibit
replication of SARS-CoV-2 by binding to its papain-like protease
[101]. However, no in
vitro antiviral activities were shown in SARS-CoV-2 infected Vero E6
cells [102]. A
meta-analysis of five retrospective studies showed no significant
protective effect of famotidine in decreasing the rates of severe
illness, intubation, or death in patients with COVID-19 [103] |
Favipiravir |
Favipiravir is an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase inhibitor. Not
available in the USA. In an open-label, non-randomized clinical trial in
China, favipiravir was associated with reduced duration of viral
shedding and time to improvement of chest imaging compared to
lopinavir/ritonavir [104].
In other RCTs, favipiravir showed no significant protective effect in
viral clearance [105] or
time to clinical recovery [106] |
Fluvoxamine |
Selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor (SSRI) with several
hypothesized mechanisms of action including anti-inflammatory cytokine
regulation via inactivation of sigma-1 receptor activity, interference
of lysosomal trafficking of SARS-CoV-2, and decreased platelet
aggregation [107]. One RCT
(N = 152) found a lower likelihood
of clinical deterioration in adult outpatients with symptomatic COVID-19
treated with fluvoxamine 100 mg three times daily for 15 days compared
to placebo [108].
Observational data have shown that other SSRIs (e.g., escitalopram and
fluoxetine) were associated with decreased risk of intubation or death
[109]. Additional
studies are needed to determine fluvoxamine’s place in therapy as an
antiviral or adjunct treatment for minimizing inflammatory or
procoagulant effects of COVID-19 |
Interferons (IFNs) |
Interferons upregulate the body’s natural immune system which
theoretically can benefit patients with viral infections. IFN alpha and
beta have shown in vitro activity against SARS-CoV-2, and IFN beta seems
to produce a stronger effect on SARS-CoV-2 than on SAR-CoV-1
[110, 111]. Clinical trial data that
specifically evaluates interferon therapy in COVID-19 infection are
lacking. Available trials evaluated IFNs as a component of a combination
therapy. An open-label RCT showed that the combination therapy of IFN
beta-1b, ribavirin, plus LPV/RTV was more effective than LPV/RTV
monotherapy in shortening the time to negative SARS-CoV-2 polymerase
chain reaction (PCR) results and symptom resolution in patients who
had < 7 days of symptoms [112]. Another open-label RCT in Iran among patients
with severe COVID-19 illness showed significantly reduced 28-day
mortality with subcutaneous interferon 1a compared to the control group
[113] |
Ivermectin |
Conflicting in vitro evidence of activity against SARS-CoV-2.
Several retrospective cohort studies and small RCTs have shown mixed
outcomes with ivermectin. An RCT Iraq (N = 118) with mild to severe COVID-19 patients showed that
ivermectin plus doxycycline was associated with reduced time to recovery
[114], and another study
conducted in Bangladesh (N = 72)
among patients with mild COVID-19 showed a faster viral clearance with
ivermectin monotherapy without similar effect on clinical symptoms
[115]. However, a larger
RCT in Colombia among hospitalized patients with mild COVID-19, 5-day
ivermectin therapy did not improve median time to resolution of symptoms
compared with placebo [116]. Furthermore, the high risk of bias, lack of
blinding, wide heterogeneity, and some concerns over data veracity among
available RCTs with ivermectin means definitive interpretation of
ivermectin’s role in COVID-19 awaits larger, RCTs [117] |
Lopinavir with ritonavir (LPV/RTV) |
Lopinavir is proposed to block the main protease of SARS-CoV-1
and inhibit viral replication. An open-label RCT from China early in the
pandemic suggested that LPV/RTV treatment given within 12 days from
symptom onset was associated with faster recovery and lower mortality
than those in the standard-of-care (SOC) group [118]. However, subsequent RCTs,
including two large open-label RCTs among hospitalized patients with
COVID-19, LPV/RTV was not effective in reducing the time to mortality,
hospital discharge, and risk for progression to mechanical ventilation
[19, 119] |
Molnupiravir |
Prodrug of ribonucleoside analog beta-d-N4-hydroxycytidine
which competes as a substrate for viral ribonucleic acid (RNA)
polymerases, causing viral error catastrophe due to increased viral
mutation beyond a biologically tolerable threshold, impairment of viral
fitness [120]. In vivo
data demonstrated significantly decreased SARS-CoV-2 transmission in
ferret models and potent antiviral effect in human epithelial cells
(half maximal inhibitory concentration [IC50]
0.15 uM) [121,
122]. Phase 1 and 2 data
showed potential efficacy and safety in humans [120]. A phase 3 study evaluating
molnupiravir for the outpatient management of COVID-19 was stopped early
at interim analysis due to favorable reduction in risk of
hospitalization or death, but the full results have not been
peer-reviewed or published (NCT04575597) [123]. Manufacturer terminated the
phase 3 portion of its study evaluating molnupiravir for hospitalized
patients with COVID-19 due to lack of perceived clinical benefit
[124] |
Nitazoxanide |
Antiprotozoal drug with in vitro activity against a range of
viruses (e.g., respiratory syncytial virus [RSV], hepatitis B virus
[HBV], hepatitis C virus [HCV]). It is hypothesized that nitazoxanide
affects SARS-CoV-2 entry and fusion into host cells, disrupts viral
genome synthesis and translation, packaging and release of virions
[125]. In vitro evidence
suggests similar efficacy against SARS-CoV-2 replication in cell culture
assays (EC50 2.12 uM) compared to remdesivir
(EC50 0.77uM) and chloroquine
(EC50 1.13uM) [92]. One RCT (N = 465) found nitazoxanide 500 mg three times daily for
5 days for mild COVID-19 significantly reduced the viral load but showed
no difference in symptom resolution compared to placebo [126]. Majority of clinical data are
observational or retrospective with high risk of bias. A
placebo-controlled RCT in preprint also found a significant decline in
viral load in mild or moderate COVID-19 with nitazoxanide but no
clinical outcomes were measured [127] |
Nitric oxide (NO) |
Although studied in non-COVD-19 patients with acute
respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), inhaled NO has limited evidence in
COVID-19. It is recommended as a rescue therapy for severe ARDS in
COVID-19 patients where other options fail to improve oxygenation (weak
recommendation, CIII) [3•,
67]. A Cochrane review of
13 trials in non-COVID-19 ARDS patients did not show a mortality benefit
(38.2% vs. 37.5%, RR = 1.04; 95% CI, 0.9 to 1.19) and only a transient
improvement in oxygenation [128] |
Ribavirin |
Ribavirin was not found to be effective against SARS-CoV-1 in
vitro [129], and the
combination of ribavirin with interferon-alpha against MERS-CoV did not
reduce mortality in a multicenter observational study [130] |
Ruxolitinib |
Janus-associated kinase (JAK) 1 and 2 inhibitor capable of
suppressing cytokine signaling responsible for hyperinflammatory
response and organ damage in moderate to severe COVID-19 [131]. One RCT (N = 43) comparing ruxolitinib to placebo
found no statistical difference any clinical outcome but numerically
favored ruxolitinib for faster median time to clinical improvement (12
vs. 15 days), improvement on imaging at 14 days (90% vs. 61.9%), and
28-day mortality (0% vs. 14.3%) [132]. Similar mechanism to baricitinib so the lack of
statistical difference in the RCT may be due to small sample
size |
Vitamin D |
Hypothesized to play a role in ARDS [133]; Vitamin D deficiency (defined
as serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration < 20 ng/mL) may be
associated with higher risk of developing several infections
[134]; In an open-label
RCT among hospitalized patients with COVID-19 pneumonia (N = 76), vitamin D supplementation was
associated with reduced rate of ICU admissions (vitamin D vs. SOC; 50%
vs. 2%; p < 0.001) [135]. In another double-blind,
placebo-controlled RCT among hospitalized adults with moderate to severe
COVID-19 (N = 240), vitamin D
supplementation increased serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations but
failed to improve clinical outcomes compared to placebo [136] |