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COVID-19 causes significant thrombosis and coagulopathy, with elevated D-dimer a predictor of adverse outcome. The precise mechanism of this coagulopathy remains unclear; one hypothesis is that loss of angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 activity during viral endocytosis leads to pro-inflammatory angiotensin-II accumulation, loss of angiotensin-1-7 and subsequent vascular endothelial activation. We undertook a double-blind randomized, placebo-controlled experimental medicine study to assess the effect of TRV027, a synthetic angiotensin-1-7 analogue on D-dimer in 30 patients admitted to hospital with COVID-19. The study showed a similar rate of adverse events in TRV027 and control groups. There was a numerical decrease in D-dimer in the TRV027 group and increase in D-dimer in the placebo group; however, this did not reach statistical significance (P = .15). A Bayesian analysis demonstrated that there was a 92% probability that this change represented a true drug effect.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1111/bcp.15618

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2023-04-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

89

Pages

1495 - 1501

Total pages

6

Keywords

clinical trials, coagulation, randomized controlled trial, Humans, COVID-19, Bayes Theorem, Pilot Projects, Blood Coagulation Disorders, Angiotensins, Double-Blind Method, Treatment Outcome, Oligopeptides