Purpose

This clinical trial aims to test the effects of fluvoxamine as a treatment for Long COVID. Fluvoxamine is an FDA approved SSRI for Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), that has already had success in preventing hospitalization in patients with COVID-19 (STOP COVID and TOGETHER trials). This trial is testing whether fluoxamine helps to improve symptoms and the negative impacts of long COVID in residents of Missouri and Illinois.

Condition

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 25 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  1. Men and woman age 25 and older; 2. Not currently hospitalized 3. Participant self-report of past acute COVID episode with symptom onset and/or initial positive test at least 3 months since initial COVID symptoms and/or test confirming SARS-CoV-2 infection Note: Since some people with long COVID may not have been able to obtain testing during the acute phase of illness, history of a positive COVID-19 test is not required. We will collect data regarding the results of any past COVID-19 testing, but this will not affect eligibility for the trial. 4. Currently symptomatic with self-reported worsening of cognitive function for at least the past 2 months, that could not be better explained by other reasons (i.e. alternative diagnosis or medication changes). 5. Able to provide informed consent. 6. Currently reside in Missouri or Illinois

Exclusion Criteria

  1. Illness severe enough to require hospitalization at the time of starting the study. 2. Unstable medical comorbidities (eg decompensated cirrhosis), per patient report and/or medical records. 3. Immunocompromised from the following: solid organ transplant, BMT, high dose steroids (>20mg prednisone per day), or tocilizumab 4. Already enrolled in another COVID 19 medication trial (not including vaccination or prophylaxis trials) 5. Unable to provide informed consent 6. Unable to perform the study procedures, including not being a resident of the states of Missouri or Illinois 7. Taking donepezil (rationale: donepezil is a S1R agonist), or sertraline (rationale: sertraline is a strong sigma-1 antagonist). 8. Taking phenytoin (rationale: fluvoxamine inhibits its metabolism), clopidogrel (rationale: fluvoxamine inhibits its metabolism from pro-drug to active drug which raises risk of cardiovascular events), and St John's wort (rationale: fluvoxamine + St John's wort are considered contraindicated because of the risk of serotonin syndrome) 9. Taking SSRIs or SNRIs. 10. Individuals who report they have bipolar disorder or are taking medication for bipolar disorder (lithium, valproate, high-dose antipsychotic), unless the investigator concludes that the risk for mania is unlikely (ie it is doubtful that the patient actually has bipolar disorder). 11. Individuals who take alprazolam or diazepam and are unwilling to cut the medication by 25% (rationale: fluvoxamine modestly inhibits the metabolism of these drugs). 12. Participants taking theophylline, tizanidine, clozapine, or olanzapine (drugs with a narrow therapeutic index that are primarily metabolized by CYP 1A2, which is inhibited by fluvoxamine) will be reviewed with a study investigator and excluded unless the investigator concludes that the risk to the participant is low (this would be unlikely; example: participant takes tizanidine only as needed and is willing to avoid it during study duration).

Study Design

Phase
Phase 2/Phase 3
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Primary Purpose
Treatment
Masking
Double (Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
Fluvoxamine
  • Drug: Fluvoxamine
    Fluvoxamine is an FDA approved drug for the treatment of OCD. This trial is testing the effects of the drug on long COVID.
Placebo Comparator
Placebo
  • Drug: Fluvoxamine
    Fluvoxamine is an FDA approved drug for the treatment of OCD. This trial is testing the effects of the drug on long COVID.

Recruiting Locations

Washington University School of Medicine
Saint Louis, Missouri 63110
Contact:
Angela Stevens
stevens.a@wustl.edu

More Details

NCT ID
NCT05874037
Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
Washington University School of Medicine

Study Contact

Angela Stevens
314-362-6291
stevens.a@wustl.edu

Detailed Description

This clinical trial will test a promising drug for treatment of long COVID in 300 adults who 1) are post-COVID-19 (at least 3 months since initial COVID symptoms and/or test confirming SARS-CoV-2 infection); and 2) have evidence of neurocognitive Long COVID (e.g., "brain fog", trouble concentrating, etc) which is causing suffering and/or impairment. The trial will determine whether fluvoxamine (1) reduces long COVID symptoms, 2) improves cognitive performance. Fluvoxamine is an SSRI (FDA approved for OCD) that also activates the sigma-1 receptor (an immunomodulatory receptor). It has been shown to prevent clinical deterioration and hospitalization in outpatients with acute COVID-19 (STOP COVID and TOGETHER trials). For the current study, we will randomize participants to fluvoxamine which is initially dosed at their preference, vs. placebo. This is done in the following manner. First, each participant will receive an acute bout of fluvoxamine: one dose of 25mg, then one dose of 50mg, then one dose of 100mg. We will assess their subjective reaction to these test doses and use the information to randomize them to an individually tailored course of fluvoxamine, vs. a matched placebo, for 16 weeks. The benefits of this are (1) participants are more likely to accept randomization and continue in the study if randomized to a dose they've already tested and accepted; (2) participants' initial response, if any, to the acute dose may allow future precision-medicine use of fluvoxamine, allowing physicians to give patients a test dose and then a full trial preferentially to participants who are likely to respond. After the randomized portion of the trial, participants will be given an opportunity to participate in open-label treatment with fluvoxamine for 16 weeks. At the end of treatment, the study medication will be tapered off over an approximate 1-2 week period, depending on the final dose of study medication, and adjusted as appropriate if they experience discontinuation symptoms. Outcome assessments will be a combination of patient-reported assessments, validated neuropsychological tests, and biomarkers of underlying inflammatory pathophysiology.

Notice

Study information shown on this site is derived from ClinicalTrials.gov (a public registry operated by the National Institutes of Health). The listing of studies provided is not certain to be all studies for which you might be eligible. Furthermore, study eligibility requirements can be difficult to understand and may change over time, so it is wise to speak with your medical care provider and individual research study teams when making decisions related to participation.