Διαβάστε όλη την μελέτη Αμερικανών επιστημόνων που επιβεβαιώνουν πλήρως στην ουσία... τα όσα αναφέρει ο καθηγητής Ιατρικής και Διευθυντής του Μεσογειακού Ινστιτούτου
Μολυσματικών Ασθενειών της Μασσαλίας, Ντιντιέ Ραούλτ....ο οποίος αποκάλυψε πως η ουσία υδροξυχλωροκίνη βελτιώνει πολύ τους ασθενείς απο COVID-19....
Η χλωροκίνη είναι ένα φάρμακο που πριν από 70 χρόνια νίκησε στην ουσία την ελονοσία.
Η χλωροκίνη είναι ένα φάρμακο που πριν από 70 χρόνια νίκησε στην ουσία την ελονοσία.
An Effective Treatment for Coronavirus (COVID-19)
Presented by: James M. Todaro,
MD (Columbia MD, jtodaro2@gmail.com) and Gregory J. Rigano, Esq.
(grigano1@jhu.edu)
In consultation with Stanford
University School of Medicine, UAB School of Medicine and National Academy of
Sciences researchers.
March 13, 2020
Summary
Recent guidelines from South
Korea and China report that chloroquine is an effective antiviral therapeutic
treatment against Coronavirus Disease 2019.
Use of chloroquine (tablets) is showing favorable outcomes in humans
infected with Coronavirus including faster time to recovery and shorter
hospital stay. US CDC research shows
that chloroquine also has strong potential as a prophylactic (preventative)
measure against coronavirus in the lab, while we wait for a vaccine to be
developed. Chloroquine is an
inexpensive, globally available drug that has been in widespread human use
since 1945 against malaria, autoimmune and various other conditions.
Chloroquine: C18H26ClN3
Background
The U.S. CDC and World Health
Organization have not published treatment measures against Coronavirus disease
2019 (“COVID-19”). Medical centers are
starting to have issues with traditional protocols. Treatments, and ideally a preventative
measure, are needed. South Korea and
China have had significantly more exposure and time to analyze diagnostic,
treatment and preventative options. The
U.S., Europe and the rest of the world can learn from their experience. According to former FDA commissioner, board
member of Pfizer and Illumina, Scott Gotlieb MD, the world can learn the most
about COVID-19 by paying closest attention to the response of countries that
have had significant exposure to COVID-19 before the U.S. and Europe.[1]
As per the U.S. CDC,
“Chloroquine (also known as chloroquine phosphate) is an antimalarial medicine…
Chloroquine is available in the United States by prescription only… Chloroquine
can be prescribed for either prevention or treatment of malaria. Chloroquine
can be prescribed to adults and children of all ages. It can also be safely
taken by pregnant women and nursing mothers.”[2]
CDC research also shows that
“chloroquine can affect virus infection in many ways, and the antiviral effect
depends in part on the extent to which the virus utilizes endosomes for entry.
Chloroquine has been widely used to treat human diseases, such as malaria,
amoebiosis, HIV, and autoimmune diseases, without significant detrimental side
effects.”[3]
The treatment guidelines of
both South Korea and China against COVID-19 are generally consistent, outlining
chloroquine as an effective treatment.
Specifically, according to the
Korea Biomedical Review, in February 2020 in South Korea, the COVID-19 Central
Clinical Task Force, composed of physicians and experts treating patients
agreed upon treatment principles for patients with COVID-19.[4] In China, the General Office of the National
Health Commission, General Office of the State Administration of Traditional
Chinese Medicine as well as a Multi-Center Collaborative Group of Guangdong
Provincial Department of Science and Technology and Guangdong Provincial Health
Comp and the China National Center for Biotechnology Development have
established effective treatment measures based on human studies.[5]
According to their research (reported in
Clinical Trials Arena),
“Data from the drug’s
[chloroquine] studies showed ‘certain curative effect’ with ‘fairly good
efficacy’ … patients treated with chloroquine demonstrated a better drop in
fever, improvement of lung CT images, and required a shorter time to recover
compared to parallel groups. The
percentage of patients with negative viral nucleic acid tests was also higher
with the anti-malarial drug… Chloroquine
has so far shown no obvious serious adverse reactions in more than 100
participants in the trials… Chloroquine
was selected after several screening rounds of thousands of existing
drugs. Chloroquine is undergoing further
trials in more than ten hospitals in Beijing, Guangdong province and Hunnan
province.”[6]
Treatment Guidelines from South Korea[7]
According to the Korea
Biomedical Review, the South Korean COVID-19 Central Clinical Task Force
guidelines are as follows:
1. If patients are young, healthy, and
have mild symptoms without underlying conditions, doctors can observe them
without antiviral treatment;
2. If more than 10 days have passed since
the onset of the illness and the symptoms are mild, physicians do not have to
start an antiviral medication;
3. However, if patients are old or have
underlying conditions with serious symptoms, physicians should consider an antiviral
treatment. If they decide to use the antiviral therapy, they should start the
administration as soon as possible:
… chloroquine 500mg orally per
day.
4. As chloroquine is not available in
Korea, doctors could consider hydroxychloroquine 400mg orally per day
(Hydroxychloroquine is an analog of chloroquine used against malaria,
autoimmune disorders, etc. It is widely
available as well).
5. The treatment is suitable for 7 - 10
days, which can be shortened or extended depending on clinical progress.
Notably, the guidelines mention
other antivirals as further lines of defense, including anti-HIV drugs.
Treatment Guidelines from China[8]
According to China’s Novel
Coronavirus Pneumonia Diagnosis and Treatment Plan, 7th Edition, the treatment
guidelines are as follows:
1. Treatment for mild cases
includes bed rest, supportive treatments, and maintenance of caloric intake.
Pay attention to fluid and electrolyte balance and maintain homeostasis.
Closely monitor the patient's vitals and oxygen saturation.
2. As indicated by clinical
presentations, monitor the hematology panel, routine urinalysis, CRP,
biochemistry (liver enzymes, cardiac enzymes, kidney function), coagulation,
arterial blood gas analysis, chest radiography, and so on. Cytokines can be
tested, if possible.
3. Administer effective
oxygenation measures promptly, including nasal catheter, oxygen mask, and high
flow nasal cannula. If conditions allow, a hydrogen-oxygen gas mix (H2/O2:
66.6%/33.3%) may be used for breathing.
4. Antiviral therapies:
... chloroquine phosphate
(adult 18-65 years old weighing more than 50kg: 500mg twice daily for 7 days;
bodyweight less than 50kg: 500mg twice daily for day 1 and 2, 500mg once daily
for day 3 through 7) …
Additionally, the Guangdong
Provincial Department of Science and Technology and the Guangdong Provincial
Health and Health Commission issued a report stating “Expert consensus on
chloroquine phosphate for new coronavirus pneumonia: … clinical research
results show that chloroquine improves the success rate of treatment and
shortens the length of patient’s hospital stay.”[9] The report further goes on to cite research
from the US CDC from 2005 as well as research from the University of Leuven
University in Belgium regarding chloroquine’s effectiveness against SARS coronavirus
at the cellular level.[10]
Like the South Korean
guidelines, notably, other antivirals (e.g. anti-HIV drugs) are listed as
further lines of defense. The most
research thus far has been around chloroquine.
Chloroquine as a prophylactic (preventative) measure against
COVID-19[11]
According to research by the US
CDC, chloroquine has strong antiviral effects on SARS coronavirus, both
prophylactically and therapeutically.
SARS coronavirus has significant similarities to COVID-19. Specifically, the CDC research was completed
in primate cells using chloroquine’s well known function of elevating endosomal
pH. The results show that “We have
identified chloroquine as an effective antiviral agent for SARS-CoV in cell
culture conditions, as evidenced by its inhibitory effect when the drug was
added prior to infection or after the initiation and establishment of
infection. The fact that chloroquine exerts an antiviral effect during pre- and
post-infection conditions suggest that it is likely to have both prophylactic
and therapeutic advantages.”
The study shows that
chloroquine is effective in preventing SARS-CoV infection in cell culture if
the drug is added to the cells 24 h prior to infection.
FIGURE 1
Prophylactic effect of
chloroquine. Vero E6 cells pre-treated with chloroquine for 20 hrs.
Chloroquine-containing media were removed and the cells were washed with
phosphate buffered saline before they were infected with SARS-CoV (0.5
multiplicity of infection) for 1 h in the absence of chloroquine. Virus was
then removed and the cells were maintained in Opti-MEM (Invitrogen) for 16–18 h
in the absence of chloroquine. SARS-CoV antigens were stained with
virus-specific HMAF, followed by FITC-conjugated secondary antibodies. (A) The
concentration of chloroquine used is indicated on the top of each panel. (B)
SARS-CoV antigen-positive cells at three random locations were captured by
using a digital camera, the number of antigen-positive cells was determined,
and the average inhibition was calculated. Percent inhibition was obtained by
considering the untreated control as 0% inhibition. The vertical bars represent
the range of SEM.
In the case of chloroquine
treatment prior to infection, the impairment of terminal glycosylation of ACE2
may result in reduced binding affinities between ACE2 and SARS-CoV spike
protein and negatively influence the initiation of SARS-CoV infection. The cell surface expression of
under-glycosylated ACE2 and its poor affinity to SARS-CoV spike protein may be
the primary mechanism by which infection is prevented by drug pretreatment of
cells prior to infection.
In addition, the study also
shows that chloroquine was very effective even when the drug was added 3–5 h
after infection, suggesting an antiviral effect even after the establishment of
infection.
Figure 2
Post-infection chloroquine
treatment reduces SARS-CoV infection and spread. Vero E6 cells were seeded and
infected as described for Fig. 1 except that chloroquine was added only after
virus adsorption. Cells were maintained in Opti-MEM (Invitrogen) containing
chloroquine for 16–18 h, after which they were processed for
immunofluorescence. (A) The concentration of chloroquine is indicated on the
top. (B) Percent inhibition and SEM were calculated as in Fig. 1B. (C) The
effective dose (ED50) was calculated using commercially available software
(Grafit, version 4, Erithacus Software).
When chloroquine is added after
infection, it can rapidly raise the pH and subvert on-going fusion events
between virus and endosomes, thus inhibiting the infection. When added after the initiation of infection,
it likely affects the endosome-mediated fusion, subsequent virus replication,
or assembly and release. Specifically,
rapid elevation of endosomal pH and abrogation of virus-endosome fusion may be
the primary mechanism by which virus infection is prevented under
post-treatment conditions.
The US CDC study goes on to
conclude that:
“The infectivity of
coronaviruses other than SARS-CoV are also affected by chloroquine, as
exemplified by the human CoV-229E [15]. The inhibitory effects observed on
SARS-CoV infectivity and cell spread occurred in the presence of 1–10 μM chloroquine, which are plasma concentrations
achievable during the prophylaxis and treatment of malaria (varying from
1.6–12.5 μM) [26] and hence are well tolerated by patients. Chloroquine, a relatively safe, effective and
cheap drug used for treating many human diseases including malaria, amoebiasis
and human immunodeficiency virus is effective in inhibiting the infection and
spread of SARS CoV in cell culture.”
COVID-19 and Chloroquine:
Mechanisms of Action[12]
COVID-19 in a single stranded,
positive strain RNA virus with a protein shell and membrane. The genome is of the same sense of the
mRNA. It goes through a lifecycle where
incoming viral COVID genome has to become double stranded RNA and the new
strand becomes the new strand for the new mRNA.
There are significant similarities between COVID-19 and SARS
coronavirus. Both COVID-19 and SARS-like
coronaviruses have machinery for regulating their own replication and
production of their proteins.
Coronavirus depends on the breakdown of macromolecules such as
proteins. Specifically, the virus
depends on turning over the host proteins to trigger response for available
building blocks to make their own proteins or nucleic acids. They break down due to low PH catalyzed by
hydrolysis. Additionally, coronaviruses have non-structural proteins that are
not part of the capsid (protein shell of the virus). These non-structural proteins are regulatory
proteins that take over the host cell and suppress the immune system of the
host (similar to HIV). Coronavirus can
create growth factor like mechanisms (e.g. cytokines) to optimize the growth
environment in the cell to favor it.
It is this part of the
coronavirus’ replicative path that chloroquine inhibits. Notably, because of its nitrogen structure,
chloroquine has the unique ability to get into cells and cross endosomal
membranes. Once inside, nitrogens in
chloroquine (and quinines in general) prevent acidification by absorbing a high
amount of hydrogens that simply then interact with nitrogen and then
chloroquine becomes positively charged - an ionic interaction which makes it
harder for the endosome to become acidified.
The result is a buffer that holds it at the higher pH and prevents it
from becoming acidic enough to be functional.
To summarize, because chloroquine has a multitude of extra nitrogens,
once it crosses the membrane and enters an organelle, the organelle is
prevented from reaching a lower pH. The
organelle’s enzymes cannot work because the donor group will be a hydrogen ion,
disabling the hydrolysis required for coronavirus replication. This means that all kinds of events in the
cell are incapable of performing optimally, including viral replication.
Chloroquine’s entrance into the
organelle likely constipates the whole system.
An analogy is that the virus is like a garbage facility which has to
break down and burn up the garbage and if it cannot, the garbage piles up and
the city becomes paralyzed. This is
likely the case for any virus, cancer cells or any other condition that is
dependent on turning over the worn out or incorrectly synthesized proteins.
The UK has banned the export of
Chloroquine[13]
As of February 26, 2020, the UK
government has added chloroquine to the list of medicines that cannot be
parallel exported from the UK.
Chloroquine was never on this list before. This likely happened because of the growing
body of evidence of chloroquine’s effectiveness against coronavirus.
China prioritizes internal use
of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) including Chloroquine[14]
In early February, Chongqing
Kangle Pharmaceutical was requested by the Ministry of Industry and Information
Technology, Consumption Division to promptly increase the manufacturing and
production of the active pharmaceutical ingredients chloroquine phosphate
despite slowed production during the Chinese New Year.
Key Risks and Tradeoffs
There has been massive
de-stabilization of society due to COVID-19.
Mutations[15]
RNA viruses are subject to
fairly high mutation rates as RNA based genomes do not copy themselves
faithfully, thereby accumulating mutations quickly which can lead to failure of
the virus (analogy: unaudited software code will often eventually fail due to a
critical error) or can lead to a stronger mutation - which is likely what has
happened in 2020 (when coronavirus “jumped” from animal to human; it is
doubtful that this has occurred because of the use of chloroquine) as we have
have two forms of COVID-19 (“more aggressive” and “less aggressive”). If the replication quality of RNA virus like
coronavirus can be destabilized this will likely cause it to self destruct, but
there is always the risk that the virus mutates to become more aggressive.
Treating COVID-19 with
chloroquine, as is being done in South Korea and China does have the potential
to lead to a mutation. The mutation can
either be beneficial or harmful to humans.
In this particular case, chloroquine is likely being used to destabilize
the replication quality of COVID-19, providing significant potential for
COVID-19 to self-destruct, which would likely bide more time for health systems
worldwide to increase capacity and equipment as well as allow time for the
public release of a vaccine. All
precaution must be taken into account for the risk of escape where COVID-19
comes out stronger.
Manufacturing
Chloroquine and its analogs has
been manufactured and distributed at global scale since approximately
1945. While there has recently been a
shortage of N95 protective masks, medical systems can adjust and dramatically
increase the supply of chloroquine in the world. Chloroquine tablets and intravenous
formulations are generic and easy to produce.
Safety[16]
Chloroquine is a prescription
drug. It can have side effects and has
contraindications. One often cited side
effect is chloroquine retinopathy, which can result in permanent vision loss
after high cumulative doses of chloroquine. However, retinal damage is
extremely rare in patients with a total dosage under 400g (dosage level only
reached after years of treatment). Medical professionals must be consulted
before use of chloroquine. Chloroquine tablets are readily available in the
U.S. and have never been removed from the market. Intravenous chloroquine was
taken off the market in the USA pre-2000 because of the absence of acute
malarial infections in the USA - there was no use for the intravenous
form. It can easily be brought back to
the market.
Formulation Optimizations[17]
Tablet vs. Intravenous
Currently chloroquine is most
widely administered in tablet form (chloroquine phosphate. While readily available, the issue is that
when the tablet is ingested, it must be processed through the stomach and be
taken up by the small intestine, for which then it enters the blood and
subsequently the respiratory system.
Because of the metabolism, this takes time and there is a loss of
chloroquine delivery to the respiratory system (where COVID-19 replicates).
When chloroquine is used
intravenously against malaria (chloroquine hydrochloride), it is being
mainlined directly into the blood stream so that it is distributing around the
body within seconds, likely encountering the virus faster and at a higher
concentration in the respiratory system.
Intravenous formulations are readily available and should be studied
accordingly.
Further research should be
carried out using chloroquine in nanoparticles and various fast, slow and
sustained released formulations, as well as combinations of chloroquine and
other molecules.
Repurposing other FDA approved
drugs
As per Steve Schow PhD,
Professor of Chemical and Systems Biology at Stanford University School of
Medicine and Lead Advisor to Stanford’s SPARK Translational Research Program:
“There are a number of related
isoquinoline and quinoline drug family members who might exhibit the same
general acid neutralizing effects. In addition certain antidepressants and
antipsychotic drugs are known to accumulate in lysosomes via this acid-base process
and might be effective here if the doses needed aren’t too high.”[18]
New Molecular Entity:
Chloroquine analogs with more nitrogens
The nitrogens in chloroquine
and quinines in general prevent acidification by absorbing a high amount of
hydrogens that then interact with nitrogen, and,in turn, transfer a positive
charge to chloroquine. This ionic
interaction makes it harder and harder for the endosome to become acidified,
therefore disrupting viral replication.
If more nitrogens are added, either by making extra branches of
ionizable nitrogens or lengthening one of the chains by putting extra carbons
and other nitrogens around it, this may have even greater effect. The key issue will be whether there is a heavy
change in bioavailability - will the new molecule be able to enter the cell and
reach the right place with similar efficiency.
Conclusion
Chloroquine can both prevent and treat malaria. Chloroquine can both prevent and treat
coronavirus in primate cells (Figure 1 and Figure 2). According to South Korean and China human
treatment guidelines, chloroquine is effective in treating COVID-19. Given chloroquine’s human safety profile and
existence, it can be implemented today in the U.S., Europe and the rest of the
world. Medical doctors may be reluctant
to prescribe chloroquine to treat COVID-19 since it is not FDA approved for
this use. The United States of America
and other countries should immediately authorize and indemnify medical doctors
for prescribing chloroquine to treat COVID-19.
We must explore whether chloroquine can safely serve as a preventative
measure prior to infection of COVID-19 to stop further spread of this highly
contagious virus.
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Next Steps from the Community
Disseminate this publication amongst the
medical community. Get more feedback.
Send this publication to your scientific
contacts in South Korea and China - lets get more data, details, etc. Science never ends.
Translate this paper into all languages.
Explore all options for use of chloroquine
against any medical condition that depends on the turnover of worn out or
incorrectly synthesized proteins.
Acknowledgements
Special thanks to Stanford
University School of Medicine, SPARK Translational Research Program, Steve
Schow, PhD, The Lab of Louise T. Chow, PhD and Thomas R. Broker, PhD, Bruce
Bloom DDS, JD of HealX and Adrian Bye.
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Informational Purposes
Only
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[3] Vincent, Martin J et al.
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[4]
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[5]
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translated as https://www.chinalawtranslate.com/en/chloroquine-phosphate/ ;
Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia Diagnosis and Treatment Plan (Provisional 7th
Edition)
translated as
https://www.chinalawtranslate.com/en/coronavirus-treatment-plan-7/ ;
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.
[6]
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. This research must be confirmed and
furthermore ruled out that the subjects that had negative viral nucleic acid
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[7]
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[8] Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia
Diagnosis and Treatment Plan (Provisional 7th Edition)translated as
https://www.chinalawtranslate.com/en/coronavirus-treatment-plan-7/
[9]
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Technology Department and Guangdong Provincial Health and Health Commission's
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[10] US CDC, Vincent MJ ,
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[11] All research from this
section is from: US CDC, Vincent MJ , Bergeron E , Benjannet S , et Al
.Chloroquine IS A potent inhibitor of SARS coronavirus Infection and Spread
of[J].Virology Journal,2005,2(. 1):69.The DOI: 10.1186 / 1743-422X-2-69
[12] All research from this
section is from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4147684/ ,
https://virologyj.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12985-019-1182-0#citeas
,https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1232869/#B15 , https://www.nature.com/articles/s41422-020-0282-0
, Thomas R. Broker, PhD, Stanford University School of Medicine, Telephone
discussion March 12, 2020 ,
https://www.sciencealert.com/genetic-analysis-shows-wuhan-coronavirus-is-similar-to-sars
.
[13] https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/872567/medicines_that_cannot_be_parallel_exported_from_the_uk_13_march_2020.csv/preview
[14]
http://doc.irasia.com/listco/hk/tfkf/announcement/a224851-e_01312ann_20200203(20200203_1952).pdf
[15] All information in this
section is from:
https://www.sciencealert.com/genetic-analysis-shows-wuhan-coronavirus-is-similar-to-sars
, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4147684/ ,
https://virologyj.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12985-019-1182-0#citeas ,
Thomas R. Broker, PhD, Stanford University School of Medicine, Telephone
discussion March 12, 2020.
[16]
https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2017/006002s044lbl.pdf ,
https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/index.cfm?event=overview.process&varApplNo=006002
, https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/resources/pdf/fsp/drugs/Chloroquine.pdf
[17]
See Safety citations.
[18] Steve Schow PhD,
https://sparkmed.stanford.edu/about-spark/who-we-are/ . Email correspondence March 2020.
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Δημοσίευση σχολίου
Τα σχόλια δημοσιεύονται με μια καθυστέρηση και αφού τα δει κάποιος από τη διαχείριση...και όχι για λογοκρισία αλλά έλεγχο για: μη αναφορά σε προσωπικά δεδομένα, τηλέφωνα, διευθύνσεις, προσβλητικά, υποτιμητικά και υβριστικά μηνύματα ή δεσμούς (Link) με σεξουαλικό περιεχόμενο.
Η φιλοξενία και οι αναδημοσιεύσεις άρθρων τρίτων, τα σχόλια και οι απόψεις των σχολιαστών δεν απηχούν κατ' ανάγκη τις απόψεις του ιστολογίου μας και δεν φέρουμε καμία ευθύνη γι’ αυτά. Προειδοποίηση: Περιεχόμενο Αυστηρώς Ακατάλληλο για εκείνους που νομίζουν ότι θίγονται προσωπικά στην ανάρτηση κειμένου αντίθετο με την ιδεολογική τους ταυτότητα ή άποψη, σε αυτούς λέμε ότι ποτέ δεν τους υποχρεώσαμε να διαβάσουν το περιεχόμενο του ιστολογίου μας.