Available in World
The RECOVERY trial has already shown that:
        -  Dexamethasone (a type of steroid) reduces the risk of dying for patients hospitalised
           with COVID-19 receiving oxygen,
        -  Regeneron's monoclonal antibody combination reduces deaths for hospitalised COVID-19
           patients who have not mounted their own immune response,
        -  Tocilizumab reduces the risk of death when given to hospitalised patients with severe
           COVID-19. It also shortens the time until patients are successfully discharged from
           hospital and reduces the need for a mechanical ventilator.
        -  Baricitinib reduces the risk of death when given to hospitalised patients with severe
           COVID-19.
        -  In patients hospitalised for COVID-19 with clinical hypoxia but requiring either no
           oxygen or simple oxygen only, higher dose corticosteroids significantly increased the
           risk of death compared to usual care, which included low dose corticosteroids.
      The trial also concluded that there is no beneficial effect of hydroxychloroquine,
      lopinavir-ritonavir, azithromycin, convalescent plasma, colchicine, aspirin, dimethyl
      fumarate or empagliflozin in patients hospitalised with COVID-19, and these arms have been
      closed to recruitment.
      BACKGROUND: In early 2020, as this protocol was being developed, there were no approved
      treatments for COVID-19, a disease induced by the novel coronavirus SARSCoV-2 that emerged in
      China in late 2019. The UK New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group
      (NERVTAG) advised that several possible treatments should be evaluated, including
      Lopinavir-Ritonavir, low-dose corticosteroids, and Hydroxychloroquine (which has now been
      done). A World Health Organization (WHO) expert group issued broadly similar advice. These
      groups also advised that other treatments will soon emerge that require evaluation.
      Since then, progress in COVID-19 treatment has highlighted the need for better evidence for
      the treatment of pneumonia caused by other pathogens, such as influenza and bacteria, for
      which therapies are widely used without good evidence of benefit or safety.
      ELIGIBILITY AND RANDOMISATION: This protocol (v27.0 as of Dec 2023) describes a randomised
      trial among patients hospitalised with pneumonia caused by COVID-19, influennza or other
      organisms. All eligible patients are randomly allocated between several treatment arms, each
      to be given in addition to the usual standard of care in the participating hospital. The
      study is subdivided into several parts, according to whether participants are children or
      adults, and by geographic area. The study is dynamic, and treatments are added and removed as
      results and suitable treatments become available. The parts in the current version of the
      protocol are as follows:
      Part A (COVID-19): discontinued in Protocol v19.0, (children's recruitment to Part A
      discontinued in Protocol v17.1)
      Part B (COVID-19): discontinued in Protocol v16.0.
      Part C (COVID-19): discontinued in Protocol v15.0.
      Part D (COVID-19): discontinued in Protocol v20.0
      Part E (COVID-19): Adults ≥18 years old with hypoxia only, randomised to high-dose
      corticosteroids vs no additional treatment.
      Part F (COVID-19): discontinued in Protocol v26.0
      Part G (Influenza): UK patients ≥12 years old (≥18 years old in other countries), with or
      without SARS-CoV-2 co-infection, randomised to baloxavir marboxil vrs no additional treatment
      Part H (Influenza): UK patients ≥12 years old (≥18 years old in other countries), with or
      without SARS-CoV-2 co-infection, randomised to oseltamivir vrs no additional treatment
      Part I (Influenza): UK patients any age (≥18 years old in other countries), without suspected
      or confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection, and with clinical evidence of hypoxia (i.e. receiving
      oxygen or with oxygen saturations <92% on room air), randomised to Low-dose corticosteroids:
      Dexamethasone vrs no additional treatment.
      Part J (COVID-19): UK patients ≥12 years old, randomised to sotrovimab vs no additional
      treatment.
      Park K (COVID-19): discontinued in Protocol v26.0
      Park L (COVID-19): discontinued in Protocol v26.0
      Part M (Community-acquired pneumonia with planned antibiotic treatment and without suspected
      or confirmed SARS-CoV-2, influenza, active pulmonary tuberculosis, or Pneumocystis
      pneumonia): Patients ≥18 years old randomised to Low-dose corticosteroids: Dexamethasone vs
      no additional treatment.
      Children with PIMS-TS: Tocilizumab vs anakinra vs no additional treatment (UK only)
      (discontinued in Protocol v23.1).
      For patients for whom not all the trial arms are appropriate or at locations where not all
      are available, randomisation will be between fewer arms.
      ADAPTIVE DESIGN: The interim trial results will be monitored by an independent Data
      Monitoring Committee (DMC). The most important task for the DMC will be to assess whether the
      randomised comparisons in the study have provided evidence on mortality that is strong enough
      (with a range of uncertainty around the results that is narrow enough) to affect national and
      global treatment strategies. In such a circumstance, the DMC will inform the Trial Steering
      Committee who will make the results available to the public and amend the trial arms
      accordingly. New trial arms can be added as evidence emerges that other candidate
      therapeutics should be evaluated.
      OUTCOMES: The main outcomes will be death, discharge, need for ventilation and need for renal
      replacement therapy. For the main analyses, follow-up will be censored at 28 days after
      randomisation. Additional information on longer term outcomes may be collected through review
      of medical records or linkage to medical databases where available (such as those managed by
      NHS Digital and equivalent organisations in the devolved nations).
      SIMPLICITY OF PROCEDURES: To facilitate collaboration, even in hospitals that suddenly become
      overloaded, patient enrolment (via the internet) and all other trial procedures are greatly
      streamlined. Informed consent is simple and data entry is minimal. Randomisation via the
      internet is simple and quick, at the end of which the allocated treatment is displayed on the
      screen and can be printed or downloaded. Key follow-up information is recorded at a single
      timepoint and may be ascertained by contacting participants in person, by phone or
      electronically, or by review of medical records and databases.
      DATA TO BE RECORDED: At randomisation, information will be collected on the identity of the
      randomising clinician and of the patient, age, sex, major co-morbidity, pregnancy, COVID-19
      onset date and severity, and any contraindications to the study treatments. The main outcomes
      will be death (with date and probable cause), discharge (with date), need for ventilation
      (with number of days recorded) and need for renal replacement therapy. Reminders will be sent
      if outcome data have not been recorded by 28 days after randomisation. Suspected Unexpected
      Serious Adverse Reactions (SUSARs) to one of the study medication (eg, Stevens-Johnson
      syndrome, anaphylaxis, aplastic anaemia) will be collected and reported in an expedited
      fashion. Other adverse events will not be recorded but may be available through linkage to
      medical databases.
      NUMBERS TO BE RANDOMISED: The larger the number randomised the more accurate the results will
      be, but the numbers that can be randomised will depend critically on how large the epidemic
      becomes. If substantial numbers are hospitalised in the participating centres then it may be
      possible to randomise several thousand with mild disease and a few thousand with severe
      disease, but realistic, appropriate sample sizes could not be estimated at the start of the
      trial.
      HETEROGENEITY BETWEEN POPULATIONS: If sufficient numbers are studied, it may be possible to
      generate reliable evidence in certain patient groups (e.g. those with major comorbidity or
      who are older). To this end, data from this study may be combined with data from other trials
      of treatments for COVID-19, such as those being planned by the WHO.
      ADD-ON STUDIES: Particular countries or groups of hospitals, may well want to collaborate in
      adding further measurements or observations, such as serial virology, serial blood gases or
      chemistry, serial lung imaging, or serial documentation of other aspects of disease status.
      While well-organised additional research studies of the natural history of the disease or of
      the effects of the trial treatments could well be valuable (although the lack of placebo
      control may bias the assessment of subjective side-effects, such as gastrointestinal
      problems), they are not core requirements.
70000Patients around the world