Available in Brazil, United States
Long Covid represents a significant public health challenge, yet effective treatments
remain elusive due to the disease's heterogeneity, limited clinical data, and
inconsistent methodologies. A previous analysis of clinical and proteomic data from 1,028
subjects diagnosed with Long Covid across three continents (The LC-Optimize Study)
suggests that certain repurposed medications may offer potential therapeutic benefits.
Drug repurposing is based on the principle that many drugs interact with multiple
molecular targets and mechanisms of action, potentially extending their effects beyond
their original intended use. This phenomenon arises from the complex nature of biological
systems and the interactions between drugs and various cellular components, which our
research pipeline is designed to identify.
A key advantage of repurposed drugs is that they already have established safety and
toxicity profiles, are approved by regulatory authorities, and can therefore expedite
clinical trials with sufficient supporting data and justification.
This is a Phase III, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multi-arm platform study that will
enroll participants from Brazil, Canada, Italy, Uganda, Zambia, and the United States.
The first phase of the study will enroll approximately 348 participants globally, all of
whom must have previously tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 and have been experiencing Long
Covid symptoms for three months or more. A second phase will follow, guided by the
results of the first phase and determined through an interim analysis. This phase, which
will occur after a protocol amendment, may involve continued testing of one or both
repurposed drugs, combination treatments with an additional repurposed drug, or the
introduction of a completely new repurposed drug.
1Research sites
348Patients around the world