A cheap drug commonly used to treat gout has been shown to have the potential to significantly reduce hospital stays among patients with Covid-19 and the need for additional oxygen.
The results of new research on colchicine in Brazil come after an international trial published on Wednesday found that it reduced hospitalizations and deaths in patients with Covid-19 by more than 20%.
The researchers hailed that colchicine, which is used to treat rheumatic diseases, has the potential to be the first oral drug to treat Covid-19 in outpatient settings in a trial funded by the Quebec government and philanthropists.
The latest trial, funded by Brazilian foundations and authorities, suggested that the drug could decrease the body’s inflammatory response and help prevent damage to cells lining the walls of blood vessels.
“Whatever the mechanism of action … colchicine appears to be beneficial for the treatment of hospitalized patients with Covid-19,” according to a report on the small clinical trial that appeared in the online journal RMD Open, published by British Medical Journal.
The researchers added that it was not associated with serious side effects, such as heart or liver damage or suppression of the immune system, factors that have sometimes been linked to some other drugs used to treat Covid.