Around the world, researchers are working extremely hard to develop new treatments and interventions for COVID-19 with new clinical trials opening nearly every day. This directory provides you with information, including enrollment detail, about these trials. In some cases, researchers are able to offer expanded access (sometimes called compassionate use) to an investigational drug when a patient cannot participate in a clinical trial.
The information provided here is drawn from ClinicalTrials.gov. If you do not find a satisfactory expanded access program here, please search in our COVID Company Directory. Some companies consider expanded access requests for single patients, even if they do not show an active expanded access listing in this database. Please contact the company directly to explore the possibility of expanded access.
Emergency INDs
To learn how to apply for expanded access, please visit our Guides designed to walk healthcare providers, patients and/or caregivers through the process of applying for expanded access. Please note that given the situation with COVID-19 and the need to move as fast as possible, many physicians are requesting expanded access for emergency use. In these cases, FDA will authorize treatment by telephone and treatment can start immediately. For more details, consult FDA guidance. Emergency IND is the common route that patients are receiving convalescent plasma.
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Displaying 100 of 476Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia Research Foundation
Few studies have reported the efficacy of HCQ in reducing the viral load and improving the severity of symptoms in hospitalized COVID-19 cases with serious respiratory infection. However, the prophylactic benefits of HCQ has not been clearly defined yet.
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
This study is being done to see if hydroxychloroquine is an effective treatment for COVID-19.
National Polytechnic Institute, Mexico
Main goal: To generate information on the efficacy and safety of Dialyzable Leukocyte Extract (DLE) as an aid in the treatment of patients with acute respiratory infection (suspected or confirmed cases of COVID-19). Primary goal: To generate information on the efficacy of DLE as an aid in symptomatic treatment, by reducing the signs and symptoms of acute respiratory infection (suspected/confirmed cases of COVID-19). Secondary goals: 1. To evaluate clinical deterioration and respiratory alarm data. 2. To evaluate the duration of the clinical picture. 3. To explore cytokine changes associated with the therapeutic effect induced by DLE. 4. To obtain data on the safety of DLE as an aid in the symptomatic treatment of acute respiratory infection (suspected/confirmed cases of COVID-19). 5. To generate information to validate the contingency scale to assess the severity of acute respiratory disease (suspected/confirmed cases of COVID-19). Justification The systemic inflammatory response has been recognized as being responsible for COVID-19 complications. Immunomodulation strategies to control it are currently being considered, including the use of systemic steroids to down-regulate the systemic inflammatory response, the use of human immunoglobulin and even chloroquine given its anti-inflammatory and antiviral qualities; however, none of these treatments has been sufficiently studied or has shown any significant change in the clinical course of infected patients. Due to the importance of the COVID-19 pandemic and in the absence of specific treatment, it is important to implement new treatments that allow modulating the immune response, and one strategy may be the addition of DLE to symptomatic and supportive treatment. Hypotheses by goals. 1. The addition of DLE to the symptomatic treatment could decrease the severity of the clinical outcome (signs and symptoms) in individuals with an acute respiratory infection (cases suspected/confirmed by COVID-19). 2. The addition of DLE to the symptomatic treatment could decrease the clinical deterioration due to the acute respiratory infectious process (suspected/confirmed cases of COVID-19). 3. The addition of DLE to the symptomatic treatment could decrease the duration of the clinical outcome (suspected/confirmed cases of COVID-19).
Military Hospital of Tunis
A multicenter randomized clinical trial aiming to assess the efficacy of hydroxychloroquine associated to Zinc compared to hydroxychloroquine, in the prevention of Military Health Professionals Exposed to SARS CoV2 in Tunisia
Hadassah Medical Organization
Title: The use of Tocilizumab in the management of patients who have severe COVID-19 with suspected pulmonary hyperinflammation. This is a study designed to assess the therapeutic value of intravenous tocilizumab administered as single 8mg/Kg dose in patients affected by SARS-CoV2 infection with a pulmonary manifestation causing hypoxia. Aim of the study is to test the hypothesis that anti-IL6 treatment can be effective in reducing the virus-induced cytokine storm, blocking deterioration of lung function or even promoting a rapid improvement of clinical conditions, preventing tracheal intubation and/or death. This drug will be administered to those patients entering the ICU with severe acute respiratory failure COVID-19 disease. The endpoints are death and duration of hospitalization. The patients will be assessed with surrogate markers determining the level of the cytokine storm.
Ain Shams University
The aim of this project is to introduce way for treatment of patients with severe COVID-19 disease with respiratory complications.
Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins
Patients with COVID-19 requiring inpatient hospitalization will be randomized to treatment with standard of care or standard of care + bicalutamide. This will be a randomized, open-label study to determine if bicalutamide improves the rate of clinical improvement in patients with COVID-19.
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
The coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) is spreading throughout the United States. While there are no known therapies to treat those who have become sick, there have been some reports that a medication currently used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, and malaria (Hydroxychloroquine sulfate, also known as Plaquenil) may help to lessen the chance or severity of illness, especially if combined with a medicine that treats other kinds of infections (Azithromycin, also known as Zithromax or Zmax or Zpak). There are some people who test positive for the virus but who are otherwise not ill. Current standard of care is to advise these people to self-monitor but no treatment is offered. It is not known how many of these individuals will remain symptom free, and how many will become sick or how severe those symptoms will be. This study will randomize those people who do not have symptoms into one of three treatment plans 1) Hydroxycholoquine and Azithromycin, or 2) no active medication (placebo). All participants will be followed for 2 months. The study will determine if there is any benefit to those who are asymptomatic to taking taking Hydroxychloroquine sulfate in combination with Azithromycin, or if there is no benefit from taking these medications.
Max Healthcare Insititute Limited
The novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19), which began in Wuhan, China, in December 2019, has been declared to be a pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO), Caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), COVID-19 has resulted in 1,781,127 cases and 108,994 deaths globally (till 12th April, 2020), affecting 199 countries and 2 international conveyances. US FDA has recently approved Convalescent Plasma from patients recovered from COVID 19 for the treatment of severe or life threatening COVID-19 infections. In a small case series, five critically ill COVID-19 patients with ARDS were treated with convalescent plasma containing neutralizing antibodies. Infusion of plasma was followed by improvement in clinical status in all five patients, with no deaths and the study reported that three patients were discharged, whilst two continued to be stable on mechanical ventilation. We designed this phase II, open label, randomized clinical trial with the primary objective to assess the safety and efficacy of the therapy in the second stage.
Foshan University Laboratory of Emerging Infectious Disease Institute of Translational Medicine The First Hospital of Jilin University China
Recombinant Bacterial ACE2 receptors -like enzyme of B38-CAP could be promising treatment for COVID-19 infection- and Its inflammatory complications better than recombinant human ACE2 Mahmoud ELkazzaz(1),Tamer Haydara(2),Yousry Abo-amer(3), Quan Liu(4) 1. Department of chemistry and biochemistry, Faculty of Science, Damietta University, Egypt. 2. Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Kafrelsheikh University, Egypt 3. Hepatology,Gastroenterology and Infectious Diseases Department, Mahala Hepatology Teaching Hospital, Egypt 4. School of Life Sciences and Engineering, Foshan University, Foshan, Guangdong Province; Laboratory of Emerging Infectious Disease, Institute of Translational Medicine, The First Hospital of Jilin University, Changchun, China. Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has infected over 100 million people causing over 2.4 million deaths over the world, and it is still expanding. There is an urgent need for targeted and effective COVID-19 treatments which has put great pressure on researchers across the world for developing effective drugs. This paper reviews the possibility of using Recombinant Bacterial ACE2 Receptors -Like Enzyme of B38-CAP to treat SARS-CoV-2 based on the intracellular mechanism of SARS-CoV-2 transmission and consequences caused. Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) plays a key role in cardiovascular physiology and pathology, and it's being currently being investigated as a potential covid-19 and acute lung failure treatment through several clinical trials.. The SARS-CoV2 binding site was identified as ACE2, a part of the RAAS, which is known to protect the lung from injuries. it has been postulated that SARS-CoV-2 binding to ACE2 may attenuate residual ACE2 activity, skewing the ACE/ACE2 balance to a state of heightened angiotensin II activity leading to inflammatory and oxidative organ damage, as well as pulmonary vasoconstriction, which can lead to acute lung injury.. Therefore, treatment with recombinant soluble ACE2 protein and drugs that up regulate ACE2 may alleviate pulmonary complication. In animal models including heart failure, acute lung injury, and diabetic nephropathy, recombinant human ACE2 protein (rhACE2), which is devoid of its membrane-anchored domain thus soluble, has been shown to have beneficial effects. Despite its positive effects, rhACE2 is a glycosylated protein, which necessitates a time- and cost-intensive protein expression system using mammalian or insect cells, which may be inconvenient in drug production and medical economics. Moreover, we hypothesis that treating COVID-19 patients with recombinant soluble ACE2 protein may induce autoantibodies and T cells to cellular ACE2.Furthermore, rhACE2 may interact with spike protein based vaccine and worsen its effect . These autoantibodies may generated by enforced presentation of the soluble Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) protein in a complex with COVID-19 Spike protein in fragment crystallizable (FC) Receptor positive Antigen Presenting Cells in the blood The development of autoantibodies might make injury and damage to the host epithelial cells and hamper their ACE2 dependent function in lungs, intestine and testes which express ACE2. In addition to inducing platelet aggregation and thrombosis . Although it has been stated that immune response associated with the chronic infusion of rhACE2 resulting in the degradation of rhACE226, this was not the case with B38-CAP; no antibodies against B38-CAP were detected in the serum of mice infused with B38-CAP for two weeks... In this case we suggest that bacterial engineering could be used to develop better protein drugs for COVID-19 treatment... B38-CAP is an ACE2-like enzyme derived from bacteria that reduces hypertension and cardiac dysfunction. Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) plays a key role in cardiovascular physiology and pathology, and it is currently being studied in clinical trials to treat acute lung failure. In mice, B38-CAP treatment prevented angiotensin II-induced hypertension, cardiac hypertrophy, and fibrosis. B38-CAP is an ACE2-like enzyme derived from bacteria, demonstrating that evolution has shaped a bacterial carboxypeptidase (B38-CAP) to a human ACE2-like enzyme. As a result, we think that treating COVID-19-infected patients with Bacterial ACE2 like enzymes, rather than human ACE2, may be preferable because it will perform the same role as human ACE2 and may not be recognized by COVID-19 spike protein Keywords: COVID 2019 ,Infection, B38-CAP , Bacterial ACE2 receptors -like enzyme , rhACE226.