COVID-19 treatment: real-time analysis of 6,620 studies
c19early.org
Physician COVID-19 treatment records
Many physicians used evidence-based early treatment protocols with very high efficacy. Widespread use would have ended the pandemic much sooner.
| Treatments effective | Combined Efficacy | Average cost | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | Dr. Pierre Kory | 12/12 | 82—98% | $1.89 |
![]() | Dr. Paul Marik | 12/12 | 82—98% | $1.89 |
![]() | Dr. Roger Seheult | 12/12 | 78—98% | $1.31 |
![]() | Dr. Tess Lawrie | 11/12 | 68—95% | $1.23 |
![]() | Dr. Peter McCullough | 10/10 | 67—93% | $3.65 |
![]() | Dr. Brian Tyson | 9/9 | 79—93% | $2.21 |
![]() | Dr. George Fareed | 9/9 | 79—93% | $2.21 |
![]() | Dr. Zev Zelenko | 8/8 | 79—92% | $2.36 |
![]() | Dr. Anthony Fauci | 0/3 | -26% | $4,060 |
c19early.org
COVID-19 involves the interplay of 500+ viral and host proteins and factors, providing many therapeutic targets.
c19early analyzes 6,600+ studies for 221 treatments—over 17 million hours of research.
Only three high-profit early treatments are approved in the US.
In reality, many treatments reduce risk,
with 25 low-cost treatments approved across 163 countries.
-
Naso/
oropharyngeal treatment Effective Treatment directly to the primary source of initial infection. -
Healthy lifestyles Protective Exercise, sunlight, a healthy diet, and good sleep all reduce risk.
-
Immune support Effective Vitamins A, C, D, and zinc show reduced risk, as with other viruses.
-
Thermotherapy Effective Methods for increasing internal body temperature, enhancing immune system function.
-
Systemic agents Effective Many systemic agents reduce risk, and may be required when infection progresses.
-
High-profit systemic agents Conditional Effective, but with greater access and cost barriers.
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Monoclonal antibodies Limited Utility Effective but rarely used—high cost, variant dependence, IV/SC admin.
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Acetaminophen Harmful Increased risk of severe outcomes and mortality.
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Remdesivir Harmful Increased mortality with longer followup. Increased kidney and liver injury, cardiac disorders.
Treatment protocols varied widely around the world:
Clinical evidence timeline:
Timeline for when studies showed efficacy - details and limitations.
0.5% of treatments show efficacy.
Treatment cost per life saved:
Treatment cost times median NNT - details and limitations.
0.5% of treatments show efficacy.
All clinical results for selected treatments. 0.5% of treatments show efficacy.
Top journals with less bias against low-cost treatments:
Top journals that accept positive studies for low cost treatments:
Nutrients,
Scientific Reports,
PLOS ONE,
International Journal of Infectious Diseases,
Frontiers in Medicine,
Cureus,
more...
| Random-effects meta-analysis of all studies (pooled effects, all stages). Treatments with ≤3 studies with distinct authors or with <50 control events are shown in grey. Pooled results across all stages and outcomes depend on the distribution of stages and outcomes tested - for example late stage treatment may be less effective and if the majority of studies are late stage this may obscure the efficacy of early treatment. Please see the specific stage and outcome analyses. Protocols typically combine multiple treatments which may be complementary and synergistic, and the SOC in studies often includes other treatments. 0.5% of proposed treatments show efficacy in clinical studies. | |||||
| Random-effects meta-analysis of early treatment studies (pooled effects). Treatments with ≤3 studies with distinct authors or with <50 control events are shown in grey. Pooled results across all outcomes are affected by the distribution of outcomes tested, please see detail pages for specific outcome analysis. Protocols typically combine multiple treatments which may be complementary and synergistic, and the SOC in studies often includes other treatments. 0.5% of proposed treatments show efficacy in clinical studies. | |||||
| Random-effects meta-analysis of all mortality results (all stages). Treatments with ≤3 studies with distinct authors or with <25 control events are shown in grey. Pooled results across all stages depend on the distribution of stages tested - for example late stage treatment may be less effective and if the majority of studies are late stage this may obscure the efficacy of early treatment. Please see the specific stage analyses. Protocols typically combine multiple treatments which may be complementary and synergistic, and the SOC in studies often includes other treatments. 0.5% of proposed treatments show efficacy in clinical studies. | |||||
| Random-effects meta-analysis of early treatment mortality results. Treatments with ≤3 studies with distinct authors or with <25 control events are shown in grey. Protocols typically combine multiple treatments which may be complementary and synergistic, and the SOC in studies often includes other treatments. 0.5% of proposed treatments show efficacy in clinical studies. | |||||
| Random-effects meta-analysis of prophylaxis studies (pooled effects). Treatments with ≤3 studies with distinct authors or with <50 control events are shown in grey. Pooled results across all outcomes are affected by the distribution of outcomes tested, please see detail pages for specific outcome analysis. Protocols typically combine multiple treatments which may be complementary and synergistic, and the SOC in studies often includes other treatments. 0.5% of proposed treatments show efficacy in clinical studies. | |||||
| Random-effects meta-analysis of prophylaxis mortality results. Treatments with ≤3 studies with distinct authors or with <25 control events are shown in grey. Protocols typically combine multiple treatments which may be complementary and synergistic, and the SOC in studies often includes other treatments. 0.5% of proposed treatments show efficacy in clinical studies. | |||||
| Random-effects meta-analysis of long covid results. Treatments with ≤3 studies with distinct authors or with <50 control events are shown in grey. Pooled results across all stages and outcomes depend on the distribution of stages and outcomes tested - for example late stage treatment may be less effective and if the majority of studies are late stage this may obscure the efficacy of early treatment. Please see the specific stage and outcome analyses. Protocols typically combine multiple treatments which may be complementary and synergistic, and the SOC in studies often includes other treatments. 0.5% of proposed treatments show efficacy in clinical studies. | |||||
| Random-effects meta-analysis of transmission results. Treatments with ≤3 studies with distinct authors or with <50 control events are shown in grey. Pooled results across all stages and outcomes depend on the distribution of stages and outcomes tested - for example late stage treatment may be less effective and if the majority of studies are late stage this may obscure the efficacy of early treatment. Please see the specific stage and outcome analyses. Protocols typically combine multiple treatments which may be complementary and synergistic, and the SOC in studies often includes other treatments. 0.5% of proposed treatments show efficacy in clinical studies. |
| LATE TREATMENT | ||||
| Physician / Team | Location | Patients | HospitalizationHosp. | MortalityDeath |
| Dr. David Uip (*) | Brazil | 2,200 | 38.6% (850) | 2.5% (54) |
| Dr. Jake Scott (**) | USA | 1,000 | 10.0% (100) | |
| Average | 38.6% | 6.2% | ||
| EARLY TREATMENT PROTOCOLS - 40 physicians/teams | ||||
| Physician / Team | Location | Patients | HospitalizationHosp. | MortalityDeath |
| Dr. Roberto Alfonso Accinelli 0/360 deaths for treatment within 3 days |
Peru | 1,265 | 0.6% (7) | |
| Dr. Mohammed Tarek Alam patients up to 84 years old |
Bangladesh | 100 | 0.0% (0) | |
| Dr. Oluwagbenga Alonge | Nigeria | 310 | 0.0% (0) | |
| Dr. Raja Bhattacharya up to 88yo, 81% comorbidities |
India | 148 | 1.4% (2) | |
| Dr. Flavio Cadegiani | Brazil | 3,450 | 0.1% (4) | 0.0% (0) |
| Dr. Alessandro Capucci | Italy | 350 | 4.6% (16) | |
| Dr. Shankara Chetty | South Africa | 8,000 | 0.0% (0) | |
| Dr. Deborah Chisholm | USA | 100 | 0.0% (0) | |
| Dr. Ryan Cole | USA | 400 | 0.0% (0) | 0.0% (0) |
| Dr. Marco Cosentino earlier treatment results were better |
Italy | 392 | 6.4% (25) | 0.3% (1) |
| Dr. Jeff Davis | USA | 6,000 | 0.0% (0) | |
| Dr. Dhanajay | India | 500 | 0.0% (0) | |
| Dr. Bryan Tyson & Dr. George Fareed | USA | 20,000 | 0.0% (6) | 0.0% (4) |
| Dr. Raphael Furtado | Brazil | 170 | 0.6% (1) | 0.0% (0) |
| Rabbi Yehoshua Gerzi | Israel | 860 | 0.1% (1) | 0.0% (0) |
| Dr. Heather Gessling | USA | 1,500 | 0.1% (1) | |
| Dr. Ellen Guimarães | Brazil | 500 | 1.6% (8) | 0.4% (2) |
| Dr. Syed Haider | USA | 4,000 | 0.1% (5) | 0.0% (0) |
| Dr. Mark Hancock | USA | 24 | 0.0% (0) | |
| Dr. Sabine Hazan | USA | 1,000 | 0.0% (0) | |
| Dr. Mollie James | USA | 3,500 | 1.1% (40) | 0.0% (1) |
| Dr. Roberta Lacerda | Brazil | 550 | 1.5% (8) | 0.4% (2) |
| Dr. Katarina Lindley | USA | 100 | 5.0% (5) | 0.0% (0) |
| Dr. Ben Marble | USA | 150,000 | 0.0% (4) | |
| Dr. Edimilson Migowski | Brazil | 2,000 | 0.3% (7) | 0.1% (2) |
| Dr. Abdulrahman Mohana | Saudi Arabia | 2,733 | 0.0% (0) | |
| Dr. Carlos Nigro | Brazil | 5,000 | 0.9% (45) | 0.5% (23) |
| Dr. Benoit Ochs | Luxembourg | 800 | 0.0% (0) | |
| Dr. Ortore | Italy | 240 | 1.2% (3) | 0.0% (0) |
| Dr. Valerio Pascua one patient already on oxygen died |
Honduras | 415 | 6.3% (26) | 0.2% (1) |
| Dr. Sebastian Pop | Romania | 300 | 0.0% (0) | |
| Dr. Brian Proctor | USA | 869 | 2.3% (20) | 0.2% (2) |
| Dr. Anastacio Queiroz | Brazil | 700 | 0.0% (0) | |
| Dr. Didier Raoult | France | 8,315 | 2.6% (214) | 0.1% (5) |
| Dr. Karin Ried up to 99yo, 73% comorbidities |
Turkey | 237 | 0.4% (1) | |
| Dr. Roman Rozencwaig patients up to 86 years old |
Canada | 80 | 0.0% (0) | |
| Dr. Vipul Shah | India | 8,000 | 0.1% (5) | |
| Dr. Silvestre Sobrinho | Brazil | 116 | 8.6% (10) | 0.0% (0) |
| Dr. Unknown | Brazil | 957 | 1.7% (16) | 0.2% (2) |
| Dr. Vladimir Zelenko | USA | 2,200 | 0.5% (12) | 0.1% (2) |
| Average | 2.2% | 0.1% | ||
Physicians using early combined treatment protocols had much lower
hospitalization and mortality rates compared with those following guidelines focusing on
late treatment.
Results are subject to selection and ascertainment bias and accurate analysis requires
details of the patient populations and followup, however the results are consistent across
many teams, and consistent with the extensive controlled clinical evidence showing a
significant reduction in risk with many early treatments, and complementary/synergistic
benefits with combined treatments.
(*) Dr. Uip reportedly prescribed early treatment for himself, but not for
patients1.
(**) Dr. Scott reports treating hundreds of patients and losing over a hundred,
but has not provided specific numbers2.
Dr. Scott reports following (and helping create) US guidelines.
| Amahong | Integrative meta-analysis identifying conserved host protein targets shared across SARS-CoV-2, influenza A (IAV), Zika (ZIKV), and Dengue (DENV) for.. |
| Strub-Wourgaft | 894 patient early treatment RCT: 20% higher progression (p=0.87) and 12% lower hospitalization (p=1) |
| Strub-Wourgaft | 960 patient early treatment RCT: 91% lower progression (p=0.37) and 5% lower hospitalization (p=1) |
| Strub-Wourgaft | 900 patient early treatment RCT: 91% lower progression (p=1) and 93% lower hospitalization (p=0.62) |
| McCullough | Review of pathophysiological principles related to early outpatient treatment and therapeutic approaches including reduction of reinoculation,.. |
| Zelenko | Report on the use of nebulized HCQ showing much more rapid improvement compared to tablets, with 95% of patients experiencing improved breathing.. |
| Strub-Wourgaft | 999 patient early treatment RCT: 92% lower progression (p=0.38) and 94% lower hospitalization (p=0.14) |
| Chiririwa | Review of cannabinoids, cannabimimetic compounds, and Artemisia species as potential therapeutic agents for COVID-19. |
| Strub-Wourgaft | 999 patient early treatment RCT: 92% lower progression (p=0.38) and 94% lower hospitalization (p=0.14) |
| Lawrie | 1,107 patients meta-analysis: 83% lower mortality (p<0.0001) |
| Chiririwa | Review of cannabinoids, cannabimimetic compounds, and Artemisia species as potential therapeutic agents for COVID-19. |
| He | Proteomics and machine learning study of 128 COVID-19 patients (57 mild, 51 severe) and 20 healthy controls, identifying a serum panel (CCN1,.. |
| Almacioglu | 81 patients sufficiency: 53% fewer cases (p=0.0003) |
| Yang | Systematic review and meta-analysis of 20 RCTs (n = 2,756) showing significantly lower mortality and ICU admission with vitamin D treatment for.. |
| Marik | Analysis of case fatality rates showing that the CFR was significantly greater for Northern states (>40° latitude) compared to Southern States (6.0%.. |
| Hu | Phase 1 RCT 120 healthy volunteers (80 US, 40 China) showing safety and tolerability of FB2001 (bofutrelvir). |
| Chen | In vitro and mouse study showing differential resistance of SARS-CoV-2 3CLpro T21I/E166A mutations to simnotrelvir, bofutrelvir, nirmatrelvir, and.. |
| Veselý | 127,038 patients early treatment: 46% lower mortality (p=0.11) |
| Chen | In vitro and mouse study showing differential resistance of SARS-CoV-2 3CLpro T21I/E166A mutations to simnotrelvir, bofutrelvir, nirmatrelvir, and.. |
| Chen | In vitro and mouse study showing differential resistance of SARS-CoV-2 3CLpro T21I/E166A mutations to simnotrelvir, bofutrelvir, nirmatrelvir, and.. |
Recent studies (see the individual treatment pages for all studies):
May 13 |
et al., International Journal of Molecular Sciences, doi:10.3390/ijms27104393 | Association of Serum Vitamin D and Hematological Parameters with SARS-CoV-2 PCR Positivity: A Combined Biomarker Approach in Asymptomatic Children |
| 53% fewer cases (p=0.0003). Retrospective 127 asymptomatic children with household COVID-19 exposure, showing lower vitamin D levels independently associated with SARS-CoV-2 PCR positivity. | ||
May 13 |
et al., Heliyon, doi:10.1016/j.heliyon.2026.e44988 | Vitamin D supplementation benefits COVID-19: A systematic review and meta-analysis |
| Systematic review and meta-analysis of 20 RCTs (n = 2,756) showing significantly lower mortality and ICU admission with vitamin D treatment for COVID-19. | ||
May 13 |
et al., Journal of Translational Medicine, doi:10.1186/s12967-026-08172-4 | In-depth serum proteomics atlas of COVID-19 defines a Severity-Resistance Index from a four-protein panel for disease severity and prognosis |
| Proteomics and machine learning study of 128 COVID-19 patients (57 mild, 51 severe) and 20 healthy controls, identifying a four-protein serum panel (CCN1, SELENBP1, PLA2G2A, SFTPB) and deriving a Severity-Resistance Index (SRI) for predic.. | ||
May 1 |
et al., Trials, doi:10.1186/s13063-026-09736-x | Ivermectin therapy is associated with changes in SARS-CoV-2 RNA load in asymptomatic patients: a randomized controlled trial |
| 56% lower hospitalization (p=0.24), 31% improved recovery (p=0.007), and 62% improved viral clearance (p<0.0001). RCT of 126 asymptomatic PCR+ patients with high viral load, showing improved recovery and significantly lower viral load with ivermectin treatment. All patients received zind and vitamin C. The trial selected for patients with high viral .. | ||
Apr 28 |
et al., Scientific Reports, doi:10.1038/s41598-026-50266-y | Effects of graphene photothermal adjuvant therapy in patients infected with the Omicron BF.7 variant 2022: a prospective randomized controlled trial |
| 38% higher hospitalization (p=0.02) and 35% worse recovery (p=0.03). RCT 243 mildly symptomatic hospitalized COVID-19 patients (Omicron BF.7 variant) in China showing increased risk with graphene photothermal adjuvant therapy (GPAT). All patients received nebulized N-acetylcysteine and the interaction with.. | ||
Apr 28 |
, H., MDPI AG, doi:10.20944/preprints202604.1969.v1 | A Review of the Investigation of Selected Cannabinoids, Cannabimimetic and Artemisia Combination Treatment Compounds Against COVID-19 and Their Use as Investigational Natural Therapeutic Agents |
| Review of cannabinoids, cannabimimetic compounds, and Artemisia species as potential therapeutic agents for COVID-19. | ||
Apr 27 |
et al., Journal of Virology, doi:10.1128/jvi.02223-25 | SARS-CoV-2 3CLpro mutations T21I and E166A confer differential resistance to simnotrelvir, bofutrelvir, and ensitrelvir |
| In vitro and mouse study showing differential resistance of SARS-CoV-2 3CLpro T21I/E166A mutations to simnotrelvir, bofutrelvir, nirmatrelvir, and ensitrelvir. The resistant isolate SARS2-T21I/E166A showed 4.3-9.2-fold resistance to simno.. | ||
Apr 22 |
et al., Clinical Infectious Diseases, doi:10.1093/cid/ciag272 | Ensitrelvir for the treatment of hospitalized adults with COVID-19: an international phase 3 randomized placebo-controlled trial |
| 40% higher mortality (p=0.36) and 22% worse recovery (p=0.17). RCT 589 hospitalized patients showing no significant benefit for clinical outcomes with ensitrelvir treatment. | ||
We aim to cover the most promising early treatments for
COVID-19. We use pre-specified effect extraction criteria that prioritizes
more serious outcomes, for details see methods. For specific
outcomes and different treatment stages see the individual pages.
References








