#StayHome: Early Hydroxychloroquine to Reduce Secondary Hospitalisation and Household Transmission in COVID-19
- Registration Number
- NCT04385264
- Lead Sponsor
- Center for Primary Care and Public Health (Unisante), University of Lausanne, Switzerland
- Brief Summary
BACKGROUND Despite drastic quarantine measures, COVID-19 continues to propagate and threatens global healthcare systems by saturating their capacity with high transmissibility and the particularly protracted length of stay needed by those requiring intensive care. Indeed, once patients advance to the ICU, prognosis is poor and it is thus critical to test medications that may prevent complications and reduce viral shedding. i.e. to protect ambulatory patients and their families from complications and transmission and allow them to #StayHome.
To date, no treatment has been reliably demonstrated as effective in COVID-19 patients.
Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), a common and well tolerated medication, has shown promise in vitro for reducing viral replication (for SARS-CoV-2 as well as other coronaviruses with pandemic potential such as SARS-CoV-1 and MERS). Since then, several small-scale hospital-based clinical studies have indicated the potential for reduced viral shedding and hospitalisation as well as favourable evolution of lung pathology. If started earlier, this treatment could prevent complications requiring hospitalisation and intensive care, which may not be available in low-income countries.
Robust clinical trials are required to assess the potential of HCQ in COVID-19.
OBJECTIVES This trial assesses the efficacy of early treatment with HCQ in COVID-19 outpatients to reduce the incidence and severity of complications including secondary hospitalisation, ICU admissions, lung pathology and death. Secondarily, this trial will also assess its efficacy to reduce viral transmission among household contacts during self-quarantine. The clinical data collected in this trial will also be critical in creating early prognostication models to better predict healthcare needs and have evidence-based prioritization of resource allocation, which is especially critical in low-resource settings.
METHODS The trial will recruit 800 SARS-CoV-2+ patients and their household contacts at triage sites across Switzerland. Patients included are 1) at risk of poor outcome (comorbidities or \>65y) and 2) well enough to self-isolate at home. These patients will be randomised 1:1 in HCQ:Placebo and given 6 days of early treatment (within 24 hours of the SARS-CoV-2 test). Intensive pragmatic multiparameter at-home follow-up (including point-of-care lung ultrasound in some sites) will continue until their outcome (resolution, or complications, such as hospitalisation, ICU admission, death). Household contacts will have before and after serological testing and social distancing knowledge and practices questionnaires to assess risk factors for infections. The household attack rate of new-onset infections can then assess the efficacy of HCQ to prevent transmission.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- WITHDRAWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 800
Not provided
Not provided
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Placebo Mannitol Placebo (Mannitol), oral capsules Day 0: 4 capsules PO OD Days 1-5: 2 capsules PO OD Hydroxychloroquine Hydroxychloroquine Hydroxychloroquine 200mg (HCQ, Plaquenil), oral capsules Day 0: 800mg PO OD (4 capsules) Days 1-5: 400mg PO OD (2 capsules daily)
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Proportion of poor outcomes (in index cases) During the period that the subject is considered as COVID-19-positive: Average of 11 days Proportion of secondary hospitalisations (and their length), ICU admissions (and their length) and deaths.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Secondary household attack rate (in household contacts) From day 0 (diagnosis and enrolment of index case) to 14 days after the outcome of the index case is recorded (recovery, hospitalisation or death): Average of 25 days Proportion of a household with new seropositivity for SARS-CoV-2
Subjective disease severity (in index cases) During the period that the subject is considered as COVID-19-positive: Average of 11 days An ordinal scale of disease severity using a visual analogue scale (0-10 where 0 is asymptomatic)
Rate of acute respiratory distress syndrome (in index cases) During the period that the subject is considered as COVID-19-positive: Average of 11 days As recorded during hospitalisation
Severity of radiological lung pathology (in index cases) During the period that the subject is considered as COVID-19-positive: Average of 11 days Measured with lung ultrasound, CT or x-ray
Objective disease severity (in index cases) During the period that the subject is considered as COVID-19-positive: Average of 11 days An ordinal scale of disease severity using the evolution of clinical biomarkers such as oxygen saturation, respiration rate etc.
Safety: Unintended toxic HCQ accumulation (in index cases) During the period that the subject is considered as COVID-19-positive : Average of 11 days Plasma concentrations of HCQ measured by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry
Safety: Adverse events (in index cases) During the period that the subject is considered as COVID-19-positive : Average of 11 days Ambulatory ECG and intensive monitoring for adverse events
Social distancing knowledge, attitudes and practices amongst index cases and household contacts During the period that the subject is considered as COVID-19-positive: Average of 11 days Visual analogue scores for social distancing practices (0-5, where 0 is no social distancing at all)
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Unisanté
🇨🇭Lausanne, Vaud, Switzerland