COVID-19 RCTs of Antivirals
Synthesis
Dashboard
Qualitative
Quantitative
Critical Appraisal
PRISMA
Abstract
Kevin Kallmes, Karl Holub, Keith Kallmes, Natalie Reierson, Hannah Lyons, Amber Davis, Kathryn Cowie, Nicole HardyLast Edited: 2022-09-26

BACKGROUND Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) continues to pose a significant threat to public health worldwide. The purpose of this study was to review current evidence obtained from randomized clinical trials on the efficacy of antivirals for COVID-19 treatment. METHODS A systematic literature search was performed using PubMed to identify randomized controlled trials published up to September 4, 2021 that examined the efficacy of antivirals for COVID-19 treatment. Studies that were not randomized controlled trials or that did not include treatment of COVID-19 with approved antivirals were excluded. Risk of bias was assessed using the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) method. Due to study heterogeneity, inferential statistics were not performed and data were expressed as descriptive statistics. RESULTS Of the 2,284 articles retrieved, 31 (12,440 patients) articles were included. Overall, antivirals were more effective when administered early in the disease course. No antiviral treatment demonstrated efficacy at reducing COVID-19 mortality. Sofosbuvir/daclatasvir results suggested clinical improvement, although statistical power was low. Remdesivir exhibited efficacy in reducing time to recovery, but results were inconsistent across trials. CONCLUSIONS Although select antivirals have exhibited efficacy to improve clinical outcomes in COVID-19 patients, none demonstrated efficacy in reducing mortality. Larger RCTs are needed to conclusively establish efficacy.

Study information:

PMID: 35100985

DOI: 10.1186/s12879-022-07068-0


Key Insights:
Most common antiviral studied is Lopinavir
12 out of 34 studies reported treatment with lopinavir. It was the most commonly studied antiviral in our review.
Mortality in the favipiravir group
9 studies reported mortality for patients treated with favipiravir. There were mixed results of the effect of favipiravir across the nine studies. Additionally, many studies reported no mortalities for both groups.
Clinical improvement was not shown to be improved with lopinavir
Out of the 4 studies reporting lopinavir, none of them reported a significant difference between the groups for clinical improvement.