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COVID19

International study, featuring Kolkata's CMRI, finds Doxycycline effective in checking progression of Covid-19

| @indiablooms | Feb 07, 2023, at 09:27 pm

Kolkata: A study conducted by a group of doctors from several nations, including India, has found that in hospitalized COVID-19 patients, antibiotic drug Doxycycline was a safe and inexpensive treatment widely available throughout the globe and it reduced ICU admissions when added to standard of care.

The Indian part of the trial was conducted across six hospitals which included Kolkata’s CK Birla Hospitals –CMRI.

Doxycycline is an inexpensive antibiotic that has been used for many years for several indications and has an excellent safety profile.

The antibiotic has anti-inflammatory properties which helps in tissue protection and antioxidative action.

A trial was conducted to test the hypothesis that Doxycycline works to stop the progression of Covid-19 infections to prevents ICU admissions in hospitalised patients.

This study was conducted from the end of 2020 and continued till June 2021.

Most of the patients were recruited between April 2021- June 2021 when there was the greatest deluge of severe cases.

Raja Dhar, heading the Pulmonology department at the CMRI Hospitals in Kolkata, was the Principle Investigator and oversaw the entire study process.

Speaking on the trial, Dhar told IBNS: “This has been an excellent pragmatic and very friendly collaboration by experts across multiple continents and we are greatly encouraged by the findings for this well-known and widely available antibiotic."

He said the study was very much important for India.

“The trial showed us that use of Doxycycline in moderate COVID-19 hospitalised patients actually saved lives. It also reduced transfer to ICUs,” he said.

“It was important for the individuals as well from the health economy perspective where we were struggling to cope with requirements for beds, hospitals and even the mortuaries were full,” he said.

He said: “We feel that today the importance of the trial is that what happened for COVID-19 could be replicated in other respiratory viral infections as well.”

He said: “We feel that some viral infections are still prevalent in the country as well as in other corners of the globe. So, we feel that giving Doxycycline to similar patients who are admitted to hospital with moderate disease will prevent progression of disease to a severe form. This is something we will look into in the future studies as well.”

The other participating centres were Ruby Hall Clinic in Pune, Yashoda Super Specialty Hospital in Ghaziabad, UP, Saroj Super specialty Hospital and Jaipur Golden Hospital in Delhi, Kalyan Hospital and Sterling Hospital in Vadodara, and Yashoda Hospital in Hyderabad.

The app for this study was designed by Dr Stephan D. Gadola, Clinical Immunologist and Research Scientist from Basel, John Kirkpatrick, Senior Principal Statistical Scientist, Cambridge.

Ratko Djukanovic, current Head of the Respiratory and Critical Care, Southampton NIHR Biomedical Research Centre, along with Professor  Stephn Gadola and Raja Dhar conceptualized the study, supervised it, and ultimately wrote up the study.

John Krikpatrick, a highly skilled statistical scientist, did all the statistics for the study.

Additionally, Senior Scientist Laura Gilbert from the UK, Marcel Stern and Oliver T. Keppler, Germany gave scientific inputs for this study. Hence, the study had experts from throughout the globe.

There were 387 participants who participated in the study. 77 developed critical diseases needing ICU admission.

“The arm in which doxycycline was given had an absolute and relative risk reduction compared to the arm which did not have doxycycline,” Dhar said.

“The reduction was significant by statistical analysis. Doxycycline was also well tolerated and not a single patient required stoppage of treatment due to adverse events,” he said.

The conclusion of the trial was that in hospitalized COVID-19 patients, doxycycline was a safe and inexpensive treatment widely available throughout the globe and it reduced ICU admissions when added to standard of care.

(Reporting by Supriyo Hazra/Images by Avishek Mitra/IBNS) 

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