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Efficacy and safety of pegylated interferon-α2b in moderate COVID-19: a phase 3, randomized, comparator-controlled, open-label study

Shashi Bhushan B L, Sunil Wanve, Parshottam Koradia, Vinay Bhomia, Pravin Soni, Sisir Chakraborty, Akash Khobragade, Shashank Joshi, Sanjeev Kumar Mendiratta, Kevin Kumar Kansagra, Anurag Parihar, Sunil Sharma, Jatin Patel

2021International Journal of Infectious Diseases28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of pegylated interferon alpha-2b (PEG IFN-α2b) administered in conjunction with the standard of care (SOC) in subjects with moderate coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19). METHODS: In this study, adult subjects with confirmed moderate COVID-19 were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to receive either PEG IFN-α2b + SOC or SOC alone. The primary endpoint was a two-point improvement in clinical status on Day 11, measured by the World Health Organization's seven-point ordinal scale. RESULTS: Of 250 subjects, 120 were randomized to the PEG IFN-α2b + SOC arm and 130 were randomized to the SOC arm. The results for the PEG IFN + SOC arms vs the SOC arm for the proportion of subjects with a two-point improvement in the seven-point ordinal scale were 80.36% vs 68.18% (P=0.037) on Day 8, 91.60% vs 92.56% (P=0.781) on Day 11, and 94.12% vs 95.93% (P=0.515) on Day 15. There was a time-dependent decrease in the biomarkers in both arms, and no clinically significant changes in laboratory parameters. The safety profile was similar in both arms. CONCLUSION: PEG IFN-α2b induced early viral clearance, improved the clinical status, and decreased the duration of supplemental oxygen. It provides a viable treatment option and can limit the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRandomized controlled trialClinical endpointInternal medicinePegylated interferonPEG ratioClinical trialGastroenterologyImmunologyVirusRibavirinHepatitis C virusFinanceEconomicsCOVID-19 Clinical Research StudiesSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchRespiratory viral infections research