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Efficacy and Safety of Ensovibep for Adults Hospitalized With COVID-19 : A Randomized Controlled Trial

Authors :
ACTIV-3/TICO Study Group
Barkauskas, Christina
Mylonakis, Eleftherios
Poulakou, Garyfallia
Young, Barnaby E
Vock, David M
Siegel, Lianne
Engen, Nicole
Grandits, Greg
Mosaly, Nilima R
Vekstein, Andrew M
Rogers, Ralph
Shehadeh, Fadi
Kaczynski, Matthew
Mylona, Evangelia K
Syrigos, Konstantinos N
Rapti, Vasiliki
Lye, David C
Hui, Diong Shiau
Leither, Lindsay
Knowlton, Kirk U
Jain, Mamta K
Marines-Price, Rubria
Osuji, Alice
Overcash, J Scott
Kalomenidis, Ioannis
Barmparessou, Zafeiria
Waters, Michael
Zepeda, Karla
Chen, Peter
Torbati, Sam
Kiweewa, Francis
Sebudde, Nicholus
Almasri, Eyad
Hughes, Alyssa
Bhagani, Sanjay R
Rodger, Alison
Sandkovsky, Uriel
Gottlieb, Robert L
Nnakelu, Eriobu
Trautner, Barbara
Menon, Vidya
Lutaakome, Joseph
Matthay, Michael
Robinson, Philip
Protopapas, Konstantinos
Koulouris, Nikolaos
Kimuli, Ivan
Baduashvili, Amiran
Braun, Dominique L
Günthard, Huldrych F
Ramachandruni, Srikanth
Kidega, Robert
Kim, Kami
Hatlen, Timothy J
Phillips, Andrew N
Murray, Daniel D
Jensen, Tomas O
Padilla, Maria L
Accardi, Evan X
Shaw-Saliba, Katy
Dewar, Robin L
Teitelbaum, Marc
Natarajan, Ven
Laverdure, Sylvain
Highbarger, Helene C
Rehman, M Tauseef
Vogel, Susan
Vallée, David
Crew, Page
Atri, Negin
Schechner, Adam J
Pett, Sarah
Hudson, Fleur
Badrock, Jonathan
Touloumi, Giota
Brown, Samuel M
Self, Wesley H
North, Crystal M
Ginde, Adit A
Chang, Christina C
Kelleher, Anthony
Nagy-Agren, Stephanie
Vasudeva, Shikha
Looney, David
Nguyen, Hien H
Sánchez, Adriana
Weintrob, Amy C
Grund, Birgit
Sharma, Shweta
Reilly, Cavan S
Paredes, Roger
Bednarska, Agnieszka
Gerry, Norman P
Babiker, Abdel G
Davey, Victoria J
Gelijns, Annetine C
Higgs, Elizabeth S
Kan, Virginia
Matthews, Gail
Source :
Annals of internal medicine, vol 175, iss 9
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2022.

Abstract

BackgroundEnsovibep (MP0420) is a designed ankyrin repeat protein, a novel class of engineered proteins, under investigation as a treatment of SARS-CoV-2 infection.ObjectiveTo investigate if ensovibep, in addition to remdesivir and other standard care, improves clinical outcomes among patients hospitalized with COVID-19 compared with standard care alone.DesignDouble-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, clinical trial. (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04501978).SettingMultinational, multicenter trial.ParticipantsAdults hospitalized with COVID-19.InterventionIntravenous ensovibep, 600 mg, or placebo.MeasurementsEnsovibep was assessed for early futility on the basis of pulmonary ordinal scores at day 5. The primary outcome was time to sustained recovery through day 90, defined as 14 consecutive days at home or place of usual residence after hospital discharge. A composite safety outcome that included death, serious adverse events, end-organ disease, and serious infections was assessed through day 90.ResultsAn independent data and safety monitoring board recommended that enrollment be halted for early futility after 485 patients were randomly assigned and received an infusion of ensovibep (n=247) or placebo (n=238). The odds ratio (OR) for a more favorable pulmonary outcome in the ensovibep (vs. placebo) group at day 5 was 0.93 (95% CI, 0.67 to 1.30; P=0.68; OR>1 would favor ensovibep). The 90-day cumulative incidence of sustained recovery was 82% for ensovibep and 80% for placebo (subhazard ratio [sHR], 1.06 [CI, 0.88 to 1.28]; sHR>1 would favor ensovibep). The primary composite safety outcome at day 90 occurred in 78 ensovibep participants (32%) and 70 placebo participants (29%) (HR, 1.07 [CI, 0.77 to 1.47]; HR&nbsp

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of internal medicine, vol 175, iss 9
Accession number :
edsair.od.......325..337216655653b08d8cdadc3b3c75a95c