Publication date: Feb 01, 2025
Nirmatrelvir has been shown to reduce morbidity and mortality associated with COVID-19. However, it is underutilized due to concerns regarding COVID-19 symptom rebound following nirmatrelvir’s standard 5-day course. This study aims to identify and evaluate a nirmatrelvir dosage regimen that lowers symptom rebound. Based on nirmatrelvir pharmacokinetics, we propose a novel 8-day regimen: two doses twice-daily followed by six doses once-daily to reduce rebound frequency. We then carried out a retrospective case series study of clinical outcomes among our patients to investigate their frequency of COVID-19 symptom rebound following nirmatrelvir usage. Among the 58 prescribed case patients, 49 filled and initiated the prescription. Of those 49 patients, four took the medication for fewer than 5 days, 24 for 5 days (standard regimen), and 21 for 7 or 8 days (extended regimen). Among 5-day treatment cases (n = 24), 8 (33%) experienced clinical rebound, whereas among the 7-day or 8-day treatment cases (n = 21), 2 (9. 5%) experienced rebound. These findings suggest that a longer nirmatrelvir/ritonavir course might reduce rebound symptoms compared to the standard 5-day regimen.
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Semantics
Type | Source | Name |
---|---|---|
disease | MESH | COVID-19 rebound |
disease | MESH | morbidity |
disease | MESH | COVID-19 |
disease | IDO | symptom |
drug | DRUGBANK | Ritonavir |
drug | DRUGBANK | Coenzyme M |
disease | MESH | death |
disease | MESH | treatment failure |
disease | MESH | recurrence |
pathway | REACTOME | Reproduction |
drug | DRUGBANK | Fenamole |
drug | DRUGBANK | Trestolone |
disease | MESH | Emergency |
drug | DRUGBANK | Lopinavir |