In a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers have found that metformin, a commonly prescribed diabetes medication, lowers the odds of emergency department visits, hospitalisations, or death due to COVID by over 40%; and over 50% if prescribed early in onset of symptoms. The study also found no positive effect from treatment with either ivermectin or low-dose fluvoxamine.
“Our trial suggests that metformin may reduce the likelihood of needing to go to the emergency room or be hospitalised for COVID,” said Carolyn Bramante, MD, principal investigator of the study.
The primary outcome was in fact low oxygen on a home oxygen monitor, which none of the medications in the trial prevented.
The COVID-OUT trial studied whether metformin, low-doses of the antidepressant fluvoxamine, the controversial antiparasitic ivermectin, or their combinations could serve as possible treatments to prevent ER visits or hospitalisation, as well as Long COVID.
Patients were randomised to receive one of the three drugs individually: placebo, or a combination of metformin and fluvoxamine or metformin and ivermectin. Although the study was placebo-controlled with exact-matching placebo pills, Dr Bramante said that 83% of volunteers received medications supported by existing data because of the six-arm design. Each participant received 2 types of pills to keep their treatment assignment masked, for 3 to 14 days of treatment. Each volunteer tracked their symptoms, and after 14 days, they completed a survey.
The 1323 participants in the trial were limited to adults with a body mass index greater than or equal to 25 kg/m2, which qualifies as overweight. To qualify for the study, volunteers enrolled within three days after receiving a positive COVID test. It was among the first randomised clinical trials for COVID to include pregnant women.
The study included those who were vaccinated and those who were not. This is the first published trial where the majority of participants were vaccinated.
“Although we know COVID vaccines are highly effective, we know that some new strains of the virus may evade immunity and vaccines may not be available worldwide. So we felt we should study safe, available and inexpensive outpatient treatment options as soon as possible,” said Dr Bramante. “Understanding whether outpatient treatments could ensure more people survive the illness if they contract it and have fewer long-term symptoms is an important piece of the pandemic response.”
The clinical trial launched in January 2021 after researchers noticed that outpatient metformin use appeared to decrease the likelihood of mortality from, or being hospitalised for COVID. Their research was published in the Journal of Medical Virology and in The Lancet Healthy Longevity. Test-tube studies also found that metformin inhibited the -CoV-2 in lab settings. These findings, along with additional prospective studies supporting the use of higher-dose fluvoxamine and ivermectin, provided the evidence to include all three medications as well as combination arms.
Source: University of Minnesota