Journal of Research in Pharmacy Practice (Jan 2020)

Pharmacological and nonpharmacological studies on coronavirus disease 2019: A mini-review of the recent evidence

  • Amir Hossein Alizadeh Bahmani,
  • Mehdi Hoorang,
  • Sheida Hosseini,
  • Mehrnoosh Eskandari,
  • Kiana Shayestehfard,
  • Mahyar Shekoohi,
  • Nazafarin Hatami-Mazinani,
  • Saba Afifi,
  • Ali Mohammad Sabzghabaee,
  • Payam Peymani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/jrpp.JRPP_20_71
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
pp. 175 – 180

Abstract

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Coronavirus 19 (COVID-19) is an extremely transmittable microbial infection that has emerged in Wuhan (China) in late 2019, leading to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 syndrome, and caused a pandemic all over the globe. This study is a systematic review of all 927 clinical trial studies performed worldwide from the beginning of the COVID-19 mysterious pandemic in China. These researches have registered in different databases. According to the best of our knowledge, China (74.82%), the United States (4.49%), and France (2.72%) have the most significant number of clinical trials, respectively. Clinical trials can be randomized or nonrandomized. Due to our results, 32.58% of studies were randomized, and 7.12% were not randomized. Most of the studies were open-labeled studies (22.44%), and double-blinded (4.42%) and quadruple blinded (2.48%) studies stand in second and third place regarding the number of trials, respectively. The direction and quantity of clinical trials attempted to identify a possible cure for COVID-19 demonstrates the depth of this crisis. As we are writing this article, a significant international endeavor will find a cure or vaccine for containing this devastating and mysterious disease.

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