Trial Design and Oversight
We conducted the COVIFERON trial as an investigator-initiated, three-armed, parallel-group, individually-randomized, open-labeled, controlled trial for evaluation of the safety and efficacy of IFNβ1a and IFNβ1b versus an active control group in severe COVID-19 patients admitted to a major referral medical center in Tehran, Iran.
We randomly assigned eligible patients with confirmed SARS-Cov-2 infections to one of the three following therapeutic regimens: 1) IFNβ1a (Recigen) (Subcutaneous injections of 44µg (12,000 IU) on days 1, 3, 6) + Hydroxychloroquine + Lopinavir/Ritonavir (Kaletra) [IFNβ1a group], 2) IFNβ1b (Ziferon) (Subcutaneous injections of 0·25mg (8,000,000 IU) on days 1, 3, 6) + Hydroxychloroquine + Lopinavir/Ritonavir (Kaletra) [IFNβ1b group], and 3) Hydroxychloroquine (Single dose of 400 mg on day 1, orally, in all three arms) + Lopinavir/Ritonavir (Kaletra) (400mg/100 mg twice a day for 10 days, orally, in all three arms) [control group]. All three groups received standards of care consisting of the necessary oxygen support, non-invasive, or invasive mechanical ventilation. Study was conducted from April 9, 2020, through April 30, 2020, at Loghman Hakim Hospital, a leading academic hospital of Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences.
We tried to collect our data on a potential treatment regimen, by conducting a pragmatic randomized controlled trial for severe COVID-19 patients, without sacrificing any critical investigational component, in a reasonable time frame. Owing to the emergent nature of the study, hectic and war-like conditions in the trial site, it was not feasible to blind neither the patients nor the caregivers, but the outcomes assessor (MAP) was blinded to the study arms. Furthermore, due to the time constraints and the limited resource settings of the trial, we lacked any funding or sponsorships to prepare the required placebos.
Unstratified randomization was done in a 1:1:1 ratio utilizing a block balance randomization method. The permuted block (three or six patients per block) randomization sequence was generated using Package ‘randomizeR’ in R software version 3·6·1 and placed in individual sealed and opaque envelopes for allocation concealment by an outside statistician.
The investigator (IAD) enrolled the patients and only then opened envelopes to assign patients to the different treatment groups. This method of randomization and allocation concealment results in minimum selection and confounding biases. This trial was confirmed by the Ethics in Medical Research Committee of the Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences on March 28, 2020. Signed informed consent was obtained from all of the participants or their legally authorized representatives. The trial was carried out under the Declaration of Helsinki and per the International Conference on Harmonization of Good Clinical Practice (ICH-GCP) guidelines for the conduct of clinical trials on human participants. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04343768, and the full protocol is freely available on the BMC Trials.24
Patients
Male, non-lactating, and non-pregnant female patients with at least 18 years of age who had confirmed COVID-19, defined as a positive test of Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase-Chain Reaction (RT-PCR), were screened to enter the trial. According to the medical center’s protocol, only patients with confirmed COVID-19 compatible lung involvement were admitted; as a result, all patients included in the study, also had a positive Computed Tomography Scan (CT Scan). Further eligibility criteria on admission were; [having a 1peripheral capillary oxygen saturation level (SpO2) ≤ 93% on pulse oximetry OR a respiratory frequency ≥ 24/minute while breathing ambient air] AND [at least one in every of the following: contactless infrared forehead thermometer temperature of ≥ 37·8, muscle ache, rhinitis, headache, cough or fatigue on admission] AND [acute onset time for the symptoms (Days ≤ 14)].
Although HCQ was administered in only a single dose, patients with cardiac arrhythmias (prolonged PR or QT intervals, third- or second-degree heart block) were excluded. Other exclusion criteria included consumption of potentially interacting medications with Lopinavir/Ritonavir + HCQ, IFNβ1a, IFNβ1b, history of alcohol use disorder, or any illicit drug dependence within the past five years, blood AST/ALT levels ≥ 5-fold the maximum limit of normal range on laboratory findings and participation refusal.
Clinical and Laboratory Monitoring
Vital signs (pulse rate, respiratory frequency, body temperature, and blood pressure), SpO2, Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) were recorded every four hours and a seven-step ordinal scale using a protocol-defined checklist was recorded on a daily basis.
Regarding safety concerns, daily monitoring for adverse effects and laboratory testing were carried out. Nasopharyngeal swab samples were obtained before enrollment and tested using LightMix, SarbecoVIRUS E-gene RT-PCR Kits (Roche, Berlin, Germany) or Liferiver (W-RR-0479-02, China) for E, N, and Rdrp genes. Collected data were recorded on paper checklists and our Hospital Information System (HIS), which provides electronic medical records of the patients, and then double-entered into a pre-designed EXCEL sheet and later confirmed by a third investigator.
Outcome Measures
Our primary outcome measure was TTCI, defined as the time from enrollment to discharge from the hospital or a decline of two steps on the seven-step ordinal scale; whichsoever came first. Originally introduced by Beigel and colleagues in a post-hoc analysis of an influenza study as a six-step ordinal scale, and currently recommended by the WHO R&D Blueprint Team for COVID-19 studies as a nine-step ordinal scale, the utilized seven-step ordinal scale consists of the subsequent categories: (I) Not hospitalized, and has no activity limitations; (II) Not hospitalized, but has activity limitations; (III) Hospitalized, but does not need any supplemental oxygen; (IV) Hospitalized, and needs supplemental oxygen; (V) Hospitalized, and needs either High-Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC) or non-invasive ventilation; (VI) Hospitalized, and needs invasive ventilation; and (VII) Dead.25,26
Secondary outcomes included mortality from the date of randomization until day 21, by which all of the patients had at least one of the following outcomes: 1) A decline of two steps on the seven-step ordinal scale, 2) Hospital discharge or 3) Death; SpO2 improvement defined as the difference between the last and the first recorded measurement during the hospitalization, using pulse-oximetry; length of stay in the hospital until the date of discharge from hospital or death from any cause, whichsoever came first; incidence of new mechanical ventilation use from the date of randomization until day 21. Follow-ups of discharged patients were done utilizing telemedicine visits, online, or over the telephone.
Statistical Analysis
The total sample size was calculated according to the Latouche and colleagues approach for estimating sample size in survival analysis with 80% power, alpha=0·05, Hazard Ratio (HR) of 3·0 (as the ratio of the hazard rates of TTCI corresponding to the pooled intervention groups compared to the control group) and assuming that 80% of patients would reach the primary outcome.27 The calculations were carried out using Package ‘powerSurvEpi’ in R and accounted for a dropout rate of 15%. With the above assumptions, 60 patients should have been recruited for this trial (20 patients in each arm).
The TTCI was determined when all the patients had reached day 21, with failure to reach the primary endpoint or death prior day 21 being regarded as right-censored.
Frequency rates and percentages were used for categorical variables, and Interquartile Ranges (IQRs) and median were used for continuous variables. Kruskal-Wallis test was used for comparing the continuous variables. The Wilcoxon signed-rank test compared the before and after intervention effects. Chi-Square test was used for comparing the frequency of categorical variables. Kaplan–Meier (compared with a log-rank test) was used to analyze the TTCI. Cox proportional-hazards model was also applied to calculate the HRs with 95% Confidence Intervals (CIs).
Intention-To-Treat (ITT) was the base population for the efficacy analysis, and all of the participants who had undergone randomization were included in it. (Figure 1). A cutoff point of <0·05 was used for the p-value to determine statistical significance, and all of the carried-out tests were two-tailed. R software version 3·6·1 was used to perform the statistical analyses.