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Published in: Trials 1/2022

Open Access 01-12-2022 | SARS-CoV-2 | Study protocol

A multicenter, open-label, randomized, proof-of-concept phase II clinical trial to assess the efficacy and safety of icatibant in patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) and admitted to hospital units without invasive mechanical ventilation: study protocol (ICAT-COVID)

Authors: Pierre Malchair, Aurema Otero, Jordi Giol, Xavier Solanich, Thiago Carnaval, Alonso Fernández-Nistal, Ana Sánchez-Gabriel, Carmen Montoto, Ramon Lleonart, Sebastián Videla, on behalf of the ICAT-COVID team

Published in: Trials | Issue 1/2022

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Abstract

Background

COVID-19 has quickly become a global pandemic with a substantial number of deaths and is a considerable burden for healthcare systems worldwide. Although most cases are paucisymptomatic and limited to the viral infection-related symptoms, some patients evolve to a second phase, with an impaired inflammatory response (cytokine storm) that may lead to acute respiratory distress syndrome and death. This is thought to be caused by increased bradykinin synthesis.

Methods

ICAT-COVID is a multicenter, randomized, open-label, proof-of-concept phase II clinical trial assessing the clinical efficacy and safety of adding icatibant to the standard of care in patients hospitalized with COVID-19 without invasive mechanical ventilation. Patients hospitalized with a confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia diagnosis (RT-PCR or antigen test ≤ 10 days prior to randomization, and radiographic evidence of pulmonary infiltrates), rated “4” or “5” on the WHO’s clinical status scale, are eligible. Patients will be randomized on a 1:1 ratio to either standard of care-plus-icatibant (experimental group) or to standard of care alone (control group). The experimental group will receive 30 mg of icatibant subcutaneously 3 times a day for 3 days (for a total of 9 doses). The expected sample size is 120 patients (60 per group) from 2 sites in Spain. Primary outcomes are the efficacy and safety of Icatibant. The main efficacy outcome is the number of patients reaching grades “2” or “1” on the WHO scale within 10 days of starting treatment. Secondary outcomes include “long-term efficacy”: number of patients discharged who do not present COVID-19-related relapse or comorbidity up until 28 days after discharge, and mortality.

Discussion

Icatibant, a bradykinin type 2 receptor antagonist with proven effectiveness and safety against hereditary angioedema attacks, may be beneficial for COVID-19 patients by inhibiting bradykinin’s action on endothelial cells and by inhibiting the SARS-CoV-2 M protease. Our working hypothesis is that treatment with standard of care-plus-icatibant is effective and safe to treat patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 admitted to hospital for pneumonia without invasive mechanical ventilation.

Trial registration

EudraCT 2020-002166-13. ClinicalTrials.​gov NCT04978051
Appendix
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Literature
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Metadata
Title
A multicenter, open-label, randomized, proof-of-concept phase II clinical trial to assess the efficacy and safety of icatibant in patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) and admitted to hospital units without invasive mechanical ventilation: study protocol (ICAT-COVID)
Authors
Pierre Malchair
Aurema Otero
Jordi Giol
Xavier Solanich
Thiago Carnaval
Alonso Fernández-Nistal
Ana Sánchez-Gabriel
Carmen Montoto
Ramon Lleonart
Sebastián Videla
on behalf of the ICAT-COVID team
Publication date
01-12-2022
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Trials / Issue 1/2022
Electronic ISSN: 1745-6215
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-022-06219-7

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