Fluvoxamine vs Placebo and Clinical Deterioration in Outpatients With Symptomatic COVID-19 A Randomized Clinical Trial. Lenze et al. JAMA (2020)

leokitten

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
An SSRI to treat early COVID, supposedly SSRIs can inhibit SARS-CoV-2 and also potentially have anti-inflammatory and immunoregulatory properties. I think also earlier this year there was an observational study showing patients taking SSRIs had lower risk of severe COVID and death (I think a medXriv paper)

Fluvoxamine vs Placebo and Clinical Deterioration in Outpatients With Symptomatic COVID-19A Randomized Clinical Trial. Lenze et al. JAMA (2020)

Importance Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) may lead to serious illness as a result of an excessive immune response. Fluvoxamine may prevent clinical deterioration by stimulating the σ-1 receptor, which regulates cytokine production.

Objective To determine whether fluvoxamine, given during mild COVID-19 illness, prevents clinical deterioration and decreases the severity of disease.

Design, Setting, and Participants Double-blind, randomized, fully remote (contactless) clinical trial of fluvoxamine vs placebo. Participants were community-living, nonhospitalized adults with confirmed severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection, with COVID-19 symptom onset within 7 days and oxygen saturation of 92% or greater. One hundred fifty-two participants were enrolled from the St Louis metropolitan area (Missouri and Illinois) from April 10, 2020, to August 5, 2020. The final date of follow-up was September 19, 2020.

Interventions Participants were randomly assigned to receive 100 mg of fluvoxamine (n = 80) or placebo (n = 72) 3 times daily for 15 days.

Main Outcomes and Measures The primary outcome was clinical deterioration within 15 days of randomization defined by meeting both criteria of (1) shortness of breath or hospitalization for shortness of breath or pneumonia and (2) oxygen saturation less than 92% on room air or need for supplemental oxygen to achieve oxygen saturation of 92% or greater.

Results Of 152 patients who were randomized (mean [SD] age, 46 [13] years; 109 [72%] women), 115 (76%) completed the trial. Clinical deterioration occurred in 0 of 80 patients in the fluvoxamine group and in 6 of 72 patients in the placebo group (absolute difference, 8.7% [95% CI, 1.8%-16.4%] from survival analysis; log-rank P = .009). The fluvoxamine group had 1 serious adverse event and 11 other adverse events, whereas the placebo group had 6 serious adverse events and 12 other adverse events.

Conclusions and Relevance In this preliminary study of adult outpatients with symptomatic COVID-19, patients treated with fluvoxamine, compared with placebo, had a lower likelihood of clinical deterioration over 15 days. However, the study is limited by a small sample size and short follow-up duration, and determination of clinical efficacy would require larger randomized trials with more definitive outcome measures.

Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04342663


If you prefer to read a news summary:
Scienmag: JAMA Reports Fluvoxamine As Potential Early Treatment For COVID-19
 
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Is this just a glorified let’s throw an SSRI at it to see if it sticks. Will it be tryclics next. Is there genuinely any science behind this.

The JAMA work was a small but gold standard RCT and it showed efficacy. So similar cohort size to RituxME trial and if that trial showed efficacy would we care if we knew any science behind it?
 
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How does the dosage compare to doses for depressive conditions?

ETA ages ?
Were any side effects observed at particular points in menstrual cycles?
Did any participants gave gut issues ?

Estrogen and seratonin are closely linked, and some gut bacteria can " repackage" compounds including estrogen / influence seratonin levels.

Needs a bit more digging to understand mechanisms
 
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I’m confused, has this been refuted by the scientific community as one of the causes of COVID worsening?

Yes. (and from what we knew about SARS-1, it was not a likely hypothesis)

"Is a “cytokine storm” relevant to COVID-19?" June 30, 2020
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/fullarticle/2767939
(tl;dr: no)

"Cytokine Levels in Critically Ill Patients With COVID-19 and Other Conditions" September 3, 2020
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2770484
"The findings of this preliminary analysis suggest COVID-19 may not be characterized by cytokine storm."

"Cytokine elevation in severe and critical COVID-19: a rapid systematic review, meta-analysis, and comparison with other inflammatory syndromes" Octover 16, 2020
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213260020304045
In patients with severe or critical COVID-19, the pooled mean serum interleukin-6 concentration was 36·7 pg/mL (95% CI 21·6–62·3 pg/mL; I2=57·7%). Mean interleukin-6 concentrations were nearly 100 times higher in patients with cytokine release syndrome (3110·5 pg/mL, 632·3–15 302·9 pg/mL; p<0·0001), 27 times higher in patients with sepsis (983·6 pg/mL, 550·1–1758·4 pg/mL; p<0·0001), and 12 times higher in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome unrelated to COVID-19 (460 pg/mL, 216·3–978·7 pg/mL; p<0·0001). Our findings question the role of a cytokine storm in COVID-19-induced organ dysfunction.

Evidence shows that like SARS-1 and some other coronaviruses, COVID19 is actually associated with an impaired cytokine response (of interferons).
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211124720312237

Lastly, cytokine inhibitors (such as Tocilizumab, a IL-6 inhibitor) have failed to demonstrate efficacy in COVID19

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/fullarticle/2772187
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2028836


Now, all of this is not to say that there are zero cases of cytokine release syndrome associated with COVID19, indeed with over fifty million confirmed SARS-CoV-2 cases, cases of rare syndromes like this will show up. Note that most cytokine release syndrome cases are associated with immunotherapies, such as those that use (engineered) chimeric antigen receptor T-cells as an anti-cancer therapy.
 
Evidence shows that like SARS-1 and some other coronaviruses, COVID19 is actually associated with an impaired cytokine response (of interferons).
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211124720312237

This ties in with results from Synairgen, who developed Interferon-1B as a treatment for severe asthma and have done trials on its effect on Covid19.
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanres/article/PIIS2213-2600(20)30511-7/fulltext

Sir Stephen Holgate and others at Southapton have developed this.
 
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