Ivermectin for preventing and treating COVID-19

Ivermectin for preventing and treating COVID-19

Ivermectin for preventing and treating COVID-19

Is ivermectin effective for COVID19? Updated Cochrane review ‘Ivermectin for preventing and treating COVID19’

Key messages

  • We found no evidence to support the use of ivermectin for treating COVID19 or preventing SARSCoV2 infection. The evidence base improved slightly in this update but is still limited.
  • Evaluation of ivermectin is continuing in 31 ongoing trials, and we will update this review again when their results become available.

What is ivermectin?

Ivermectin is a medicine used to treat parasites, such as intestinal parasites in animals, and scabies in humans. It is inexpensive and is widely used in regions of the world where parasitic infestations are common. It has few unwanted effects.


Medical regulators have not approved ivermectin for COVID19.

 

What did we want to find out?

We wanted to update our knowledge of whether ivermectin reduces death, illness, and length of infection in people with COVID19, or is useful in the prevention of the infection. We included trials comparing the medicine to placebo (a dummy treatment), usual care, or treatments for COVID19 that are known to work to some extent, such as dexamethasone. We excluded trials comparing ivermectin to other medicines that do not work, like hydroxychloroquine, or whose effectiveness against COVID19 is uncertain.


We evaluated the effects of ivermectin in infected people on:

  • people dying;
  • whether people’s COVID19 got better or worse;
  • quality of life;
  • serious and
  • nonserious unwanted effects;
  • viral clearance.

For prevention, we sought the effect on preventing SARSCoV2 infection and COVID19 disease.

What did we do?

We searched for randomized controlled trials that investigated ivermectin to prevent or treat COVID19. People treated in hospital or as outpatients had to have laboratoryconfirmed COVID19.



In this update, we also investigated the trustworthiness of the trials and only included them if they fulfilled clear ethical and scientific criteria.


We compared and summarized the results of the trials and rated our confidence in the evidence, based on common criteria such as trial methods and sizes.

Ivermectin

 

What did we find?

We excluded seven of the 14 trials included in the previous review as these trials did not fulfill the expected ethical and scientific criteria. Together with four new trials, we included 11 trials with 3409 participants that investigated ivermectin combined with any usual care compared to the same usual care or placebo.

For treatment, there were five trials of people in hospital with moderate COVID19 and six trials of outpatients with mild COVID19. The trials used different doses of ivermectin and different durations of treatment. 

No trial investigated ivermectin to prevent SARSCoV2 infection.
We also found 31 ongoing trials, and an additional 28 trials still requiring clarification from the authors or not yet published.


Main results

Treating people in hospital with COVID19
We do not know whether ivermectin compared with placebo or usual care 28 days after a treatment:

  • leads to more or fewer deaths (3 trials, 230 people);
  • worsens or improves patients' condition, assessed by the need for ventilation or death (2 trials, 118 people);
  • increases or reduces serious unwanted events (2 trials, 197 people).

Ivermectin compared with placebo or usual care 28 days after treatment, may make little or no difference to:

  • improving patients' condition, assessed by discharge from hospital (1 trial, 73 people);
  • nonserious unwanted events (3 trials, 228 participants). 

Seven days after treatment, ivermectin may make little or no difference to the reduction of negative COVID19 tests (3 trials, 231 participants) compared with placebo or usual care.


Treating outpatients with COVID19

Ivermectin compared with placebo or usual care 28 days after treatment, probably makes little or no difference to people dying (6 trials, 2860 people).


Ivermectin compared with placebo or usual care 28 days after treatment, makes little or no difference to the quality of life (1 trial, 1358 people).


Ivermectin compared with placebo or usual care 28 days after treatment, may make little or no difference to:

  • worsening patients' condition, assessed by admission to hospital or death (2 trials, 590 people);
  • serious unwanted events (5 trials, 1502 people);
  • nonserious unwanted events (5 trials, 1502 participants);
  • improving people's COVID19 symptoms in the 14 days after treatment (2 trials, 478 people);
  • the number of people with negative COVID19 tests 7 days after treatment (2 trials, 331 people).

Review authors, Dr. Maria Popp and Dr. Stephanie Weibel said:

“Overall, the outlook for ivermectin’s use to treat or prevent SARS-CoV-2 is poor. While laboratory results showed some promise, real-life outcomes suggest no or very little impact on mortality rates, illness, and length of infection.”

What are the limitations of the evidence?

Our confidence in the evidence, especially for outpatients, improved since the last review version because we could look at more participants included in highquality trials. Although we are quite certain regarding our results on the risk of people dying and quality of life, the confidence in the evidence is still low for many other outpatient and inpatient outcomes because there were only a few events measured. The methods differed between trials, and they did not report everything we were interested in, such as relevant outcomes.


How up to date is this evidence?

The systematic literature search is up to date to 16 December 2021. Additionally, we included trials with > 1000 participants up to April 2022.

 

Wednesday, July 27, 2022