Daily Trust

Could gout drug be a COVID remedy?

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Researcher­s will test whether a gout drug can help coronaviru­sinfected adults fight off the illness at home.

Oxford University experts have begun trials on colchicine to discover whether it can speed up recovery time and stop people needing hospital care.

The anti-inflammato­ry drug — which costs just 30p per pill — has been doled out to gout patients for decades. It is used to treat and prevent systemic inflammati­on, a feature of gout and the worst cases of coronaviru­s.

Canadian experts found that the drug showed promise in reducing hospital admissions in COVID patients.

Also, Brazilian academics last month claimed it may prevent severely-ill patients from needing oxygen.

But little colchicine’s is known about effectiven­ess in reducing overall recovery time, or whether it can fight most symptoms.

It will be added to the Oxfordrun PRINCIPLE drug trial, which has recruited 4,400 volunteers to test different medication­s on COVID patients who have been infected recently.

Colchicine is derived from the toxic autumn crocus flower in the UK and Europe and has been used as a traditiona­l jointswell­ing remedy since 1500 BC.

The drug, branded as Colcrys, stops white blood cells from overreacti­ng to infection, which can lead to organ failure and death.

Studies have shown that colchicine is safe but its side effects include diarrhoea, stomach pain, constipati­on, nausea and vomiting.

Volunteers on the PRINCIPLE trial are randomly assigned to take medication­s such as budesonide, an inhaled corticoste­roid, or get regular treatment in hospital.

The trial has already found antibiotic­s azithromyc­in and doxycyclin­e to be ineffectiv­e treatments during the early stages of COVID-19.

Participan­ts given colchicine will receive a two-week course of 0.5mg tablets once a day.

Doctors will track their condition for a month, comparing their symptoms and illness with volunteers given other drugs or no treatment.

Professor Chris Butler, one of the Oxford scientists behind the trial, said investigat­ing treatments for COVID is vital.

He said: “We are asking for eligible volunteers aged over 18 from all across the country to join the PRINCIPLE trial when they first experience COVID symptoms, and help in the search for potential treatments.

“With COVID still circulatin­g in the community, and little known about the effect of new viral variants on younger adults, it is vital we seize this window of opportunit­y to generate highqualit­y evidence to determine which treatments work, and which don’t.

“Even with successful vaccines and other preventabl­e measures in place, the availabili­ty of treatments with a solid evidenceba­se has a critical role to play in ending this pandemic, yet there are still very few options for treating COVID before it becomes a severe illness.”

Participan­ts taking colchicine must be aged 18-64 and have suffered shortness of breath during the first two weeks of their illness.

Or they must have certain underlying health conditions that put them at risk of severe illness or be aged over 65.

The trial has so far determined that the antibiotic­s azithromyc­in and doxycyclin­e are not effective treatments during the early stages

of COVID.

It is still investigat­ing the effects of budesonide, an inhaled corticoste­roid, in people aged over 50.

Junior Health Minister Lord Bethell said: “The UK continues to be a leading force in finding and rolling out safe and effective treatments for COVID-19, with lifesaving treatments dexamethas­one and tocilizuma­b identified by our research.

“The government-funded PRINCIPLE trial presents an exciting opportunit­y to find treatments outside of hospital, stopping people’s symptoms from worsening at an earlier stage of the disease.

“The expansion of the trial, with a new treatment arm that is open to a wider patient cohort, is a promising developmen­t — I encourage as many eligible people as possible over the age of 18 to sign up to the trial and play a vital role in finding more treatments for this terrible virus,” he said.

— Mail Online

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