Browsing by Author "Lopardo, Gustavo"
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Item Clinical characteristics and outcomes of hospitalized patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection in a Latin American country: Results from the ECCOVID multicenter prospective study(2021-10-08) Cordova, Ezequiel; Mykietiuk, Analia; Sued, Omar; De Vedia, Lautaro; Pacifico, Natalia; Garcia Hernandez, Matias H; Baeza, Natalia M; Garibaldi, Franco; Alzogaray, Maria Fernanda; Contreras, Rosa; Soler Puy, Lucrecia; Scapellato, Pablo G; Barcelona, Laura; Golikow, Mariana L; Piñeiro, Maria Florencia; Miño, Hugo J; Consalvo, Maria Fernanda; Nemirovsky, Corina; Sanchez, Marisa; Cabral, Myrna; Lamponi Tappata, Lucia; Blasco, Mariano; Ballivian, Jamile; Lopardo, Gustavo; Stryjewski, Martin E; ECCOVID study groupHospital Cosme Argerich, Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires (CABA), Buenos Aires, ArgentinaItem RBD-specific polyclonal F(ab´)(2) fragments of equine antibodies in patients with moderate to severe COVID-19 disease: A randomized, multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled, adaptive phase 2/3 clinical trial(2021-04-11) Lopardo, Gustavo; Belloso, Waldo H; Nannini, Esteban; Colonna, Mariana; Sanguineti, Santiago; Zylberman, Vanesa; Muñoz, Luciana; Dobarro, Martín; Lebersztein, Gabriel; Farina, Javier; Vidiella, Gabriela; Bertetti, Anselmo; Crudo, Favio; Alzogaray, Maria Fernanda; Barcelona, Laura; Teijeiro, Ricardo; Lambert, Sandra; Scublinsky, Darío; Iacono, Marisa; Stanek, Vanina; Solari, Rubén; Cruz, Pablo; Casas, Marcelo Martín; Abusamra, Lorena; Luciardi, Héctor Lucas; Cremona, Alberto; Caruso, Diego; de Miguel, Bernardo; Lloret, Santiago Perez; Millán, Susana; Kilstein, Yael; Pereiro, Ana; Sued, Omar; Cahn, Pedro; Spatz, Linus; Goldbaum, FernandoBACKGROUND: Passive immunotherapy is a therapeutic alternative for patients with COVID-19. Equine polyclonal antibodies (EpAbs) could represent a source of scalable neutralizing antibodies against SARS-CoV-2. METHODS: We conducted a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial to assess efficacy and safety of EpAbs (INM005) in hospitalized adult patients with moderate and severe COVID-19 pneumonia in 19 hospitals of Argentina. The primary endpoint was improvement in at least two categories in the WHO ordinal clinical scale at day 28 or hospital discharge (ClinicalTrials.gov number NCT04494984). FINDINGS: Between August 1st and October 26th, 2020, a total of 245 patients were enrolled. Enrolled patients were assigned to receive two blinded doses of INM005 (n = 118) or placebo (n = 123). The median age was 54 years old, 65.1% were male, and 61% had moderate disease at baseline. The median time from symptom onset to study treatment was 6 days (interquartile range 5 to 8). No statistically significant difference was noted between study groups regarding the primary endpoint (risk difference [95% CI]: 5.28% [-3.95; 14.50]; p = 0.15). The rate of improvement in at least two categories was statistically significantly higher for INM005 at days 14 and 21 of follow-up. The time to improvement in two ordinal categories or hospital discharge was 14.2 (± 0.7) days in the INM005 group and 16.3 (± 0.7) days in the placebo group, hazard ratio 1.31 (95% CI 1.0 to 1.74). Subgroup analyses showed a beneficial effect of INM005 over severe patients and in those with negative baseline antibodies. Overall mortality was 6.9% in the INM005 group and 11.4% in the placebo group (risk difference [95% CI]: 0.57 [0.24 to 1.37]). Adverse events of special interest were mild or moderate; no anaphylaxis was reported. INTERPRETATION: Although not having reached the primary endpoint, we found clinical improvement of hospitalized patients with SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia, particularly those with severe disease.