The purpose of this study is to determine if temporary androgen suppression improves the clinical outcomes of Veterans who are hospitalized to an acute care ward due to COVID-19.
A novel coronavirus, now termed Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), arose late in 2019. The first confirmed cases occurred in December in Wuhan, Hubei province, China. It now infects people on six continents, spreading person to person. The World Health Organization (WHO) classified it as a global pandemic on March 11, 2020. As of April 6, 2020, there are more than 1.2 million confirmed cases and more than 70,000 deaths attributed to this virus. Every person on Earth, as well as every United States Veteran, is at risk. This is the emergent public health threat of our time. SARS-CoV-2 is a singled stranded RNA virus related to severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus (SARS-CoV-1). SARS-CoV-2 is thought to be transmissible largely by respiratory droplets or direct contact, but might also be transmitted through aerosolization. SARS-CoV-2 disease severity ranges from no to minimal symptoms, mildly symptomatic with cough and dyspnea, to severe respiratory distress with multi-organ failure requiring admission to an intensive care unit and emergent ventilator support. Although data are evolving, the severity of illness varies with age, co-existing comorbidities, and biological sex, with older age, people with pre-existing cardiovascular disease, and males manifesting greater disease severity. A worldwide effort is in place to contain and suppress human-to-human transmission. These public-health strategies aim to slow the rate of spread and reduce the burden on critical care infrastructure. However, there is also a need effective therapeutics. Vaccine trials are underway but potential approvals are at least a year away. Development of new drugs de novo to treat SARS2-CoV-2 will likely take even longer. Thus, the most expedient therapeutic strategy to confront this pandemic will repurpose existing FDA-approved therapeutics. One potential strategy targets viral components directly, using existing antivirals and anti-infectives currently used for other diseases. Such efforts include trials of hydroxychloroquine, remdesivir, and ribavirin. Another strategy involves targeting the human proteins, rather than viral proteins, required for SARS CoV-2 entry and replication.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
96
Phoenix VA Health Care System, Phoenix, AZ
Phoenix, Arizona, United States
Central Arkansas VHS John L. McClellan Memorial Veterans Hospital, Little Rock, AR
Little Rock, Arkansas, United States
Composite of Mortality, Ongoing Need for Hospitalization, or Mechanical Ventilation at Day 15
Number of Patients who died, had a ongoing need for hospitalization, or was placed on mechanical ventilation at Day 15.
Time frame: 15 days
Time to Clinical Improvement
Time to clinical improvement as defined by a decline of 2 categories or more from the baseline modified 7-category ordinal scale of clinical status of hospitalized influenza patients or hospital discharge, whichever comes first. Participants whose condition worsened, who died, or who withdrew from the study without clinical improvement were censored. The 7-categories were defined as: 1: Not hospitalized with resumption of normal activities; 2: Not hospitalized, but unable to resume normal activities; 3: Hospitalization, not requiring supplemental oxygen; 4: Hospitalization, requiring supplemental oxygen; 5: Hospitalization, requiring nasal high-flow oxygen therapy and/or noninvasive mechanical ventilation; 6: Hospitalization, requiring extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and/or invasive mechanical ventilation; 7: Death.
Time frame: Through discharge (an average of 8 days with a maximum of 2.5 months)
Inpatient Mortality
Number of patients who died during their hospital stay
Time frame: Through discharge (an average of 8 days with a maximum of 2.5 months)
Duration of Hospitalization
Length of hospital stay (randomization to discharge)
Time frame: Through discharge (an average of 8 days with a maximum of 2.5 months)
Duration of Intubation
Length of time on mechanical ventilation. Length of mechanical ventilation imputed to maximum length (50 days) for patients who died on mechanical ventilation or who were on mechanical ventilation, but date removed was unknown. Length of mechanical ventilation imputed to 0 for patients never on mechanical ventilation.
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VA Long Beach Healthcare System, Long Beach, CA
Long Beach, California, United States
VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, West Los Angeles, CA
Los Angeles, California, United States
Miami VA Healthcare System, Miami, FL
Miami, Florida, United States
St. Louis VA Medical Center John Cochran Division, St. Louis, MO
St Louis, Missouri, United States
Brooklyn Campus of the VA NY Harbor Healthcare System, Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn, New York, United States
Manhattan Campus of the VA NY Harbor Healthcare System, New York, NY
New York, New York, United States
Philadelphia MultiService Center, Philadelphia, PA
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center, Charleston, SC
Charleston, South Carolina, United States
...and 4 more locations
Time frame: Through discharge (an average of 8 days with a maximum of 2.5 months)
Time to Normalization of Temperature.
Length of time for temperature to be less than \< 37.5 degree Celsius for 48 hours
Time frame: Through discharge (an average of 8 days with a maximum of 2.5 months)
Maximum Severity of COVID19 Illness.
Maximum severity score on the modified 7-category ordinal scale of clinical status of hospitalized influenza patients. The 7-categories were defined as: 1: Not hospitalized with resumption of normal activities; 2: Not hospitalized, but unable to resume normal activities; 3: Hospitalization, not requiring supplemental oxygen; 4: Hospitalization, requiring supplemental oxygen; 5: Hospitalization, requiring nasal high-flow oxygen therapy and/or noninvasive mechanical ventilation; 6: Hospitalization, requiring extracorporeal membrane oxygenation and/or invasive mechanical ventilation; 7: Death.
Time frame: Through discharge (an average of 8 days with a maximum of 2.5 months)
Composite of Mortality, Ongoing Need for Hospitalization, or Mechanical Ventilation at Day 30
Number of Patients who died, had a ongoing need for hospitalization, or was placed on mechanical ventilation at Day 30.
Time frame: 30 days