COVID-19 treatment: real-time analysis of 6,498 studies
Summary of clinical evidence for COVID-19 treatment:
c19early.org
COVID-19 involves the interplay of 400+ viral and host proteins and factors, providing many therapeutic targets.
c19early analyzes 6,400+ studies for 216 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 24 low-cost treatments approved across 163 countries.
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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.
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Immune support Effective Vitamins A, C, D, and zinc show reduced risk, as with other viruses.
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Thermotherapy Effective Methods for increasing internal body temperature, enhancing immune system function.
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Systemic agents Effective Many systemic agents reduce risk, and may be required when infection progresses.
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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.
| García Alvarez | Analysis of five quercetin formulations showing significant variability in quercetin content compared to label claims, with only one brand meeting.. |
| Xie | In silico study suggesting that seven compounds (fulvestrant, bucladesine, S-adenosylmethionine, valproic acid, folic acid, kaempferol, and.. |
| Veras | In vitro study showing that high-frequency ultrasound in the 3-20 MHz range can physically destroy enveloped respiratory viruses - both SARS-CoV-2.. |
| Vahed | Mouse study showing that the CXCL13 chemokine plays a protective role against SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19-like disease in K18-hACE2 transgenic.. |
| Frontera | 3,473 patients late treatment: 22% higher mortality (p=0.07) |
| Gadhiya | 283 patients late treatment: 73% higher mortality (p=0.15) |
| Kim | In vitro and clinical study showing that ETS1 and JDP2 are key transcriptional regulators driving COVID-19 severity-associated monocyte phenotypes. |
| Cano-Mendez | In vitro study showing that SARS-CoV-2 spike protein and its receptor-binding domain (RBD) activate endothelial cells and induce immunothrombotic.. |
| Saleki | Analysis of 120 patients showing elevated MCP-1/CCL2 and MMP-9 expression levels in severe COVID-19 patients compared to mild cases and healthy.. |
| Ruan | RCT 188 elderly patients with mild to moderate COVID-19 showing no significant reduction in progression to severe or critical COVID-19 with oral.. |
| Nicholson | Retrospective 2,249 hospitalized COVID-19 patients showing lower mortality after restricting remdesivir use. Mortality reduced from 7.6% to 5.6% (p .. |
| Filippini | Retrospective 561 mechanically ventilated COVID-19 ARDS patients across three Dutch university hospital ICUs, showing significant reduction in 30.. |
| Mierzejewska | In vitro study showing potential antiviral benefit with cetylpyridinium chloride (CPC) through the destabilization of simplified SARS-CoV-2 lipid.. |
| Guo | Retrospective analysis finding lower risk of post-COVID diabetes with nirmatrelvir/ritonavir but not molnupiravir. The effect may be entirely due to.. |
| Zhu | Retrospective study of 400 hospitalized COVID-19 patients with diabetes in China showing no significant difference in the composite endpoint of.. |
| Guo | Retrospective analysis finding lower risk of post-COVID diabetes with nirmatrelvir/ritonavir but not molnupiravir. The effect may be entirely due to.. |
| Rowland | Phase Ib dose-escalating RCT of 24 hospitalized COVID-19 patients showing safety and tolerability of intravenous (IV) favipiravir at doses up to 2.. |
| Maltezou | RCT 32 outpatients (28 with COVID-19) showing potential virological benefit with ammonium chloride. All participants experienced mild illness with.. |
| Zhu | Retrospective study of 400 hospitalized COVID-19 patients with diabetes in China showing no significant difference in the composite endpoint of.. |
| Li | 1,829 patients late treatment PSM: 35% lower mortality (p=0.02) and 30% lower progression (p=0.02) |
| Ganmaa | 1,747 patient late treatment RCT: 4% improvement (p=0.76), 17% lower long COVID (p=0.24), and 71% higher transmission (p=0.21) |
| Lim | RCT 396 patients with existing long COVID, showing no significant benefit with metformin or UDCA. |
| Lim | RCT 396 patients with existing long COVID, showing no significant benefit with metformin or UDCA. |
| Pinatel | In vitro study showing that human primary cytotrophoblasts are permissive to SARS-CoV-2 infection, with potential implications for antiviral.. |
| Adetunji | Cross-sectional study of 181 healthcare workers showing significantly lower serum levels of most vitamins (A, C, D, E, and B-complex vitamins except.. |
Recent studies (see the individual treatment pages for all studies):
Mar 19 |
et al., Health and Quality of Life Outcomes, doi:10.1186/s12955-026-02518-8 | Health-related quality of life in immunocompromised adults with mild–moderate COVID-19 treated with nirmatrelvir-ritonavir: results from the randomized, double-blinded EPIC-IC trial |
| RCT 150 immunocompromised adults with mild-to-moderate COVID-19 comparing 5, 10, or 15 days of nirmatrelvir/ritonavir. There was no control group. No dose-response relationship was observed: HRQoL recovery patterns were statistically.. | ||
Mar 18 |
et al., Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics, doi:10.1002/cpt.70261 | Optimal Dose and Safety of Intravenous Favipiravir in Hospitalized Patients With COVID-19: A Dose-Escalating, Randomized Controlled Phase Ib Study |
| Phase Ib dose-escalating RCT of 24 hospitalized COVID-19 patients showing safety and tolerability of intravenous (IV) favipiravir at doses up to 2,400 mg twice daily. | ||
Mar 18 |
et al., The Journal of Immunology, doi:10.1093/jimmun/vkag017 | CXCL13/CXCR5 chemokine axis promotes antiviral CXCR5+CD19+ B Cells and follicular/effector CXCR5+CD4+ T Cells in the lungs associated with protection from severe and fatal COVID-19 following infection with pathogenic SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant |
| Mouse study showing that the CXCL13 chemokine plays a protective role against SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19-like disease in K18-hACE2 transgenic mice. Authors suggest the CXCL13/CXCR5 axis as a potential immunotherapeutic target for C.. | ||
Mar 17 |
et al., BMC Medicine, doi:10.1186/s12916-026-04791-2 | Effectiveness of nirmatrelvir/ritonavir and molnupiravir on post-COVID diabetes risk among an older adult cohort: a target trial emulation study |
| Retrospective analysis finding lower risk of post-COVID diabetes with nirmatrelvir/ritonavir but not molnupiravir. The effect may be entirely due to confounding. Authors excluded only 8% of non-diabetic patients for nirmatrelvir/ritonavir.. | ||
Mar 17 |
et al., Langmuir, doi:10.1021/acs.langmuir.6c00207 | Effect of Cationic Surfactants on the Molecular Organization of the Simplified Model Lipid Envelope of SARS-CoV-2 Virus─Insights from the Langmuir Monolayer and Liposome Studies |
| In vitro study showing potential antiviral benefit with cetylpyridinium chloride (CPC) through the destabilization of simplified SARS-CoV-2 lipid envelope models. Authors found that CPC, a cationic surfactant commonly used in mouthwashes .. | ||
Mar 16 |
et al., Critical Care Explorations, doi:10.1097/cce.0000000000001392 | Tocilizumab Efficacy Across Inflammatory Subphenotypes in COVID-19-Related Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome |
| Retrospective 561 mechanically ventilated COVID-19 ARDS patients across three Dutch university hospital ICUs, showing significant reduction in 30-day mortality with tocilizumab, with no significant difference in efficacy between hypoinfla.. | ||
Mar 12 |
et al., The Journal of Nutrition, doi:10.1016/j.tjnut.2026.101398 | A Randomized Trial of Vitamin D Supplementation and COVID-19 Clinical Outcomes and Long COVID: The Vitamin D for COVID-19 Trial |
| 4% improvement (p=0.76), 17% lower long COVID (p=0.24), and 71% higher transmission (p=0.21). VIVID trial - results were withheld without explanation for over 3 years, until long after the end of the pandemic. There is no scientific or ethical justification for withholding results this long. There are many serious anomolies in the.. | ||
Mar 10 |
et al., Scientific Reports, doi:10.1038/s41598-026-42215-6 | A real-world retrospective analysis comparing the effectiveness of Azvudine and Nirmatrelvir/Ritonavir in COVID-19 patients with diabetes |
| Retrospective study of 400 hospitalized COVID-19 patients with diabetes in China showing no significant difference in the composite endpoint of disease progression (all-cause mortality, ICU admission, or invasive mechanical ventilation) b.. | ||
Mar 8 |
et al., Research Square, doi:10.21203/rs.3.rs-9009421/v1 | Effectiveness of a sustained-release ammonium chloride formulation in reducing the viral load of patients with COVID-19 or influenza: A prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study |
| RCT 32 outpatients (28 with COVID-19) showing potential virological benefit with ammonium chloride. All participants experienced mild illness with no progression to severe disease, hospitalization, or death in either cohort. There was a s.. | ||
Mar 6 |
et al., Am. J. Health-Syst. Pharm., doi:10.1093/ajhp/zxaf258 | Impact of Implementing More Restrictive Remdesivir Criteria Across a Multi-Hospital Health System |
| Retrospective 2,249 hospitalized COVID-19 patients showing lower mortality after restricting remdesivir use. Mortality reduced from 7.6% to 5.6% (p = 0.12) after restriction. No baseline details are provided and results are subject to con.. | ||
Mar 6 |
et al., BMC Infectious Diseases, doi:10.1186/s12879-026-12637-8 | A bidimensional early intervention strategy of standard of care in combination with corticosteroids in elderly patients with mild to moderate COVID-19 (BEAT-COV study): a multicentre, open-label, randomized controlled trial |
| RCT 188 elderly patients with mild to moderate COVID-19 showing no significant reduction in progression to severe or critical COVID-19 with oral corticosteroids (dexamethasone 3 mg, 210 prednisolone 20 mg, or methylprednisolone 16 mg). | ||
Mar 4 |
et al., BMC Cancer, doi:10.1186/s12885-026-15800-1 | Azvudine for the treatment of cancer patients with COVID-19: a multicenter, real-world, retrospective, cohort study |
| 35% lower mortality (p=0.02) and 30% lower progression (p=0.02). Retrospective 1,829 hospitalized cancer patients with COVID-19 in China showing lower mortality and disease progression with azvudine treatment. While the authors used a PSM-matched cohort for efficacy, they used 'Available data' (unmatch.. | ||
Mar 3 |
et al., Annals of Internal Medicine, doi:10.7326/ANNALS-25-04883 | Neither Metformin nor Ursodeoxycholic Acid Effectively Treats Postacute Sequelae of COVID-19 |
| RCT 396 patients with existing long COVID, showing no significant benefit with metformin or UDCA. | ||
Feb 28 |
et al., BMC Infectious Diseases, doi:10.1186/s12879-026-12959-7 | Association between serum vitamins and COVID-19 infection: a cross-sectional study of healthcare workers in a Nigerian tertiary hospital |
| Cross-sectional study of 181 healthcare workers showing significantly lower serum levels of most vitamins (A, C, D, E, and B-complex vitamins except B12) in those with COVID-19 infection compared to uninfected controls. Authors hypothesiz.. | ||
Feb 26 |
et al., Virus Research, doi:10.1016/j.virusres.2026.199707 | Identification of key genes modules linking brain aging signatures and COVID-19-associated cognitive impairment |
| In silico study suggesting that seven compounds (fulvestrant, bucladesine, S-adenosylmethionine, valproic acid, folic acid, kaempferol, and quercetin) may be beneficial for COVID-19-associated cognitive impairment through targeting key ag.. | ||
Feb 26 |
et al., Scientific Reports, doi:10.1038/s41598-025-34514-1 | Evaluating the effectiveness and safety of Azvudine for hospitalised patients with COVID-19 and hypertension: a multicenter retrospective cohort study |
| 36% lower mortality (p<0.0001) and 16% lower progression (p=0.03). PSM retrospective 4,868 hospitalized COVID-19 patients with hypertension showing reduced mortality with azvudine. For composite disease progression, the azvudine group had more raw events (330) than the control group (320) out of identica.. | ||
Feb 26 |
et al., medRxiv, doi:10.64898/2026.02.24.26347001 | Exploratory analyses of Immunologic Features in a Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial of Nirmatrelvir/Ritonavir for Long COVID |
| RCT 82 long COVID patients showing no significant differences with nirmatrelvir/ritonavir treatment. The study found no improvement in physical health summary scores, no changes in circulating SARS-CoV-2 spike protein levels, and no signi.. | ||
Feb 26 |
et al., Molecular Human Reproduction, doi:10.1093/molehr/gaag015 | SARS-CoV-2 infects human primary cytotrophoblasts mainly through a non-canonical entry route |
| In vitro study showing that human primary cytotrophoblasts are permissive to SARS-CoV-2 infection, with potential implications for antiviral treatment during pregnancy. Authors tested primary villous cytotrophoblasts isolated from term pl.. | ||
Feb 19 |
et al., Antiviral Research, doi:10.1016/j.antiviral.2026.106376 | Onvansertib and vilazodone inhibit SARS-CoV-2 replication via suppression of METTL3 RNA-m6A enzymatic activity |
| In vitro study showing that onvansertib and vilazodone inhibit SARS-CoV-2 replication by targeting the host RNA methyltransferase METTL3. | ||
Feb 19 |
et al., medRxiv, doi:10.64898/2026.02.18.26346542 | Early Fc-effector antibody signatures impact COVID-19 disease trajectory |
| Analysis of early immune determinants of COVID-19 disease severity in 37 immunologically naïve hospitalized patients from Spain's first pandemic wave. | ||
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