Prophylaxis for renal patients at risk of COVID-19 infection: results from the intranasal niclosamide randomised, double blinded, placebo controlled arm of the PROTECT-V platform trial
File(s)s12879-025-10584-4.pdf (1.58 MB)
Published version
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Purpose
Despite vaccination, many patients remain vulnerable to COVID-19 infection and poorer outcomes, because of underlying health conditions resulting in sub-optimal vaccine responses. This study aims to demonstrate whether intranasal niclosamide confers additional protection against COVID-19 infection above standard preventative measures including vaccination.
Methods
PROTECT-V (PROphylaxis for paTiEnts at risk of COVID-19 infecTion) is a platform trial testing multiple pre-exposure COVID-19 prophylactic agents in vulnerable patients. This paper reports results from the randomised, double blind, placebo controlled intranasal niclosamide arm.
1651 adult patients on dialysis, with a kidney transplant or renal autoimmune conditions on immunosuppression were randomised from 48 sites (37 UK; 11 Indian). Intranasal niclosamide or matched placebo was administered twice daily, for up to nine months. Primary outcome was time to symptomatic COVID-19 infection.
Results
1651 patients were randomised (826 niclosamide;825 placebo) between February 2021 to November 2022. 655(39.7%) were dialysis patients, 622(37.7%) kidney transplant recipients and 374(22.7%) had renal autoimmune disease. 97.5% patients in the UK and 66.4% patients in India with comparable proportions in both treatment groups had received COVID-19 vaccinations. Despite no adverse safety signal, there was a high withdrawal rate (40% niclosamide;23.8% placebo) due to local upper airway irritation leading to a significantly shorter treatment duration in the niclosamide group). Symptomatic COVID-19 infection during study treatment was observed in 103 patients in the niclosamide group and 133 in the placebo group (estimated hazard ratio 1.02(95%CI 0.79–1.32)).
Conclusion
Intranasal niclosamide did not reduce risk of symptomatic COVID-19 infection in this cohort compared to placebo.
Trial Registration
This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04870333 (submitted 01/03/2021; posted 03/05/2021), EudraCT: 2020–004144-28 and the Clinical Trials Registry of India (CTRI):#CTRI/2022/03/040802.
Despite vaccination, many patients remain vulnerable to COVID-19 infection and poorer outcomes, because of underlying health conditions resulting in sub-optimal vaccine responses. This study aims to demonstrate whether intranasal niclosamide confers additional protection against COVID-19 infection above standard preventative measures including vaccination.
Methods
PROTECT-V (PROphylaxis for paTiEnts at risk of COVID-19 infecTion) is a platform trial testing multiple pre-exposure COVID-19 prophylactic agents in vulnerable patients. This paper reports results from the randomised, double blind, placebo controlled intranasal niclosamide arm.
1651 adult patients on dialysis, with a kidney transplant or renal autoimmune conditions on immunosuppression were randomised from 48 sites (37 UK; 11 Indian). Intranasal niclosamide or matched placebo was administered twice daily, for up to nine months. Primary outcome was time to symptomatic COVID-19 infection.
Results
1651 patients were randomised (826 niclosamide;825 placebo) between February 2021 to November 2022. 655(39.7%) were dialysis patients, 622(37.7%) kidney transplant recipients and 374(22.7%) had renal autoimmune disease. 97.5% patients in the UK and 66.4% patients in India with comparable proportions in both treatment groups had received COVID-19 vaccinations. Despite no adverse safety signal, there was a high withdrawal rate (40% niclosamide;23.8% placebo) due to local upper airway irritation leading to a significantly shorter treatment duration in the niclosamide group). Symptomatic COVID-19 infection during study treatment was observed in 103 patients in the niclosamide group and 133 in the placebo group (estimated hazard ratio 1.02(95%CI 0.79–1.32)).
Conclusion
Intranasal niclosamide did not reduce risk of symptomatic COVID-19 infection in this cohort compared to placebo.
Trial Registration
This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04870333 (submitted 01/03/2021; posted 03/05/2021), EudraCT: 2020–004144-28 and the Clinical Trials Registry of India (CTRI):#CTRI/2022/03/040802.
Date Issued
2025-02-11
Date Acceptance
2025-01-31
Citation
BMC Infectious Diseases, 2025, 25
ISSN
1471-2334
Publisher
BMC
Journal / Book Title
BMC Infectious Diseases
Volume
25
Issue
1
Copyright Statement
© The Author(s) 2025. Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
License URL
Identifier
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/39934669
PII: 10.1186/s12879-025-10584-4
Subjects
COVID-19
Clinical trial
Prophylaxis
Renal
Humans
Male
COVID-19
Female
Middle Aged
Double-Blind Method
Administration, Intranasal
Niclosamide
Aged
SARS-CoV-2
Adult
India
Renal Dialysis
United Kingdom
Kidney Transplantation
COVID-19 Drug Treatment
Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis
Publication Status
Published
Coverage Spatial
England
Article Number
204
Date Publish Online
2025-02-11