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4 Years In, a Sobering Look at Long COVID Progress


 

Clinical Trials Exploring New Therapies

Still, a number of large clinical trials currently underway may change that, said David F. Putrino, PhD, who runs the long COVID clinic at Mount Sinai Health System in New York City.

Two clinical trials headed by Dr. Putrino’s lab are looking into repurposing two HIV antivirals to see whether they affect the levels of circulating SARS-CoV-2 virus in the body that may cause long COVID. The hope is that the antivirals Truvada and maraviroc can reduce the «reactivation of latent virus» that, said Dr. Putrino, causes lingering long COVID symptoms.

Ongoing trials are looking into the promise of SARS-CoV-2 monoclonal antibodies, produced from cells made by cloning a unique white blood cell, as a treatment option. The trials are investigating whether these antibodies may similarly target viral reservoirs that are causing persistence of symptoms in some patients.

Other trials are underway through the National Institutes of Health (NIH) RECOVER initiative in which more than 17,000 patients are enrolled, the largest study of its kind, said Grace McComsey, MD.

Dr. McComsey, who leads the study at University Hospitals Health System in Cleveland, said that after following patients for up to 4 years researchers have gathered “a massive repository of information” they hope will help scientists crack the code of this very complex disease.

She and other RECOVER researchers have recently published studies on a variety of findings, reporting in February, for example, that COVID infections may trigger other autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and type 2 diabetes. Another recent finding showed that people with HIV are at a higher risk for complications due to acute COVID-19.

Lack of Urgency Holds Back Progress

Still, others like Dr. Al-Aly and Dr. Putrino felt that the initiative isn’t moving fast enough. Dr. Al-Aly said that the NIH needs to “get its act together” and do more for long COVID. In the future, he said that we need to double down on our efforts to expand funding and increase urgency to better understand the mechanism of disease, risk factors, and treatments, as well as societal and economic implications.

“We did trials for COVID-19 vaccines at warp speed, but we’re doing trials for long COVID at a snail’s pace,” he said.

Dr. Al-Aly is concerned about the chronic nature of the disease and how it affects patients down the line. His large-scale study published last month in the journal Science looked specifically at chronic fatigue syndrome triggered by the infection and its long-term impact on patients.

He’s concerned about the practical implications for people who are weighted down with symptoms for multiple years.

“Being fatigued and ill for a few months is one thing, but being at home for 5 years is a totally different ballgame.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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