Open-label use of an aliphatic polyamine immunomodulator in patients hospitalized with COVID-19

Sergey V Efimov, Natallia V Matsiyeuskaya, Olga V Boytsova, Luydmila Yu Akhieva, Elena V Kuntsevich, Anastasia A Troshina, Elena I Kvasova, Anton A Tikhonov, Nadezhda F Khomyakova, Francisco Harrison, Jean-François Rossi, Timothy C Hardman

Abstract

Background: Evidence-based therapies used to treat coronavirus disease (COVID-19) remain limited. Azoximer bromide (AZB; Polyoxidonium®) is an immunomodulating molecule frequently used in the Russian Federation. It offers demonstrable therapeutic benefit in upper respiratory tract infections. This study evaluated the safety and efficacy of AZB when used in combination with standard of care treatment in patients hospitalized with COVID-19.

Methods: Hospitalized patients with COVID-19 (n=81; nine sites) received AZB 12 mg intravenously once daily for 3 days then intramuscularly every other day until day 17. The primary endpoint included clinical status at day 15 versus baseline. Historical control data of 100 patients from a randomized, controlled, open-label trial conducted in China were included to serve as a direct control group.

Results: Notable clinical improvement, assessed by seven-point ordinal scale (OS) score and National Early Warning Score, was observed. Mean duration of hospitalization was 19.3 days. Indicators of pneumonia and lung function showed gradual recovery to normalization. No patients died but, by day 28, one patient still required respiratory support; this patient died on day 34. A higher proportion of patients receiving AZB required invasive or non-invasive ventilation (OS 5 or 6) at baseline compared with the historical control group. Improvement in mean OS score by day 14/15 was not notable in the control group (OS 3.99–3.87) but was clear in the AZB group (OS 4.36–2.90). Mean duration of hospitalization was similar in the control group (16.0 days); however, day 28 mortality was higher, at 25.0% (n=25).

Conclusion: AZB combined with standard of care was safe and well tolerated. An apparent clinical improvement could not be fully evaluated due to the lack of a direct control group; further assessment of AZB for the treatment of COVID-19 in a randomized, placebo-controlled study is warranted.

Article Details

Article Type

Original Research

DOI

10.7573/dic.2022-1-1

Publication Dates

Accepted: ; Published: .

Citation

Efimov SV, Matsiyeuskaya NV, Boytsova OV, Akhieva LY, Kuntsevich EV, Troshina AA, Kvasova EI, Tikhonov AA, Khomyakova NF, Harrison F, Rossi JF, Hardman TC. Open-label use of an aliphatic polyamine immunomodulator in patients hospitalized with COVID-19. Drugs Context. 2022;11:2022-1-1. https://doi.org/10.7573/dic.2022-1-1

Article Views

Monthly article views (last 12 months)

Drugs in Context PubMed Central
Source HTML views PDF downloads Totals
Drugs in Context since September 15, 2025 78 5 83
PubMed Central since November 1, 2024 35 6 41
Totals 113 11 119
Register for alerts

I would like to be contacted by Drugs in Context when new articles are posted.

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.