PLoS Medicine (Mar 2016)

Experimental Treatment with Favipiravir for Ebola Virus Disease (the JIKI Trial): A Historically Controlled, Single-Arm Proof-of-Concept Trial in Guinea.

  • Daouda Sissoko,
  • Cedric Laouenan,
  • Elin Folkesson,
  • Abdoul-Bing M'Lebing,
  • Abdoul-Habib Beavogui,
  • Sylvain Baize,
  • Alseny-Modet Camara,
  • Piet Maes,
  • Susan Shepherd,
  • Christine Danel,
  • Sara Carazo,
  • Mamoudou N Conde,
  • Jean-Luc Gala,
  • Géraldine Colin,
  • Hélène Savini,
  • Joseph Akoi Bore,
  • Frederic Le Marcis,
  • Fara Raymond Koundouno,
  • Frédéric Petitjean,
  • Marie-Claire Lamah,
  • Sandra Diederich,
  • Alexis Tounkara,
  • Geertrui Poelart,
  • Emmanuel Berbain,
  • Jean-Michel Dindart,
  • Sophie Duraffour,
  • Annabelle Lefevre,
  • Tamba Leno,
  • Olivier Peyrouset,
  • Léonid Irenge,
  • N'Famara Bangoura,
  • Romain Palich,
  • Julia Hinzmann,
  • Annette Kraus,
  • Thierno Sadou Barry,
  • Sakoba Berette,
  • André Bongono,
  • Mohamed Seto Camara,
  • Valérie Chanfreau Munoz,
  • Lanciné Doumbouya,
  • Souley Harouna,
  • Patient Mumbere Kighoma,
  • Fara Roger Koundouno,
  • Réné Lolamou,
  • Cécé Moriba Loua,
  • Vincent Massala,
  • Kinda Moumouni,
  • Célia Provost,
  • Nenefing Samake,
  • Conde Sekou,
  • Abdoulaye Soumah,
  • Isabelle Arnould,
  • Michel Saa Komano,
  • Lina Gustin,
  • Carlotta Berutto,
  • Diarra Camara,
  • Fodé Saydou Camara,
  • Joliene Colpaert,
  • Léontine Delamou,
  • Lena Jansson,
  • Etienne Kourouma,
  • Maurice Loua,
  • Kristian Malme,
  • Emma Manfrin,
  • André Maomou,
  • Adele Milinouno,
  • Sien Ombelet,
  • Aboubacar Youla Sidiboun,
  • Isabelle Verreckt,
  • Pauline Yombouno,
  • Anne Bocquin,
  • Caroline Carbonnelle,
  • Thierry Carmoi,
  • Pierre Frange,
  • Stéphane Mely,
  • Vinh-Kim Nguyen,
  • Delphine Pannetier,
  • Anne-Marie Taburet,
  • Jean-Marc Treluyer,
  • Jacques Kolie,
  • Raoul Moh,
  • Minerva Cervantes Gonzalez,
  • Eeva Kuisma,
  • Britta Liedigk,
  • Didier Ngabo,
  • Martin Rudolf,
  • Ruth Thom,
  • Romy Kerber,
  • Martin Gabriel,
  • Antonino Di Caro,
  • Roman Wölfel,
  • Jamal Badir,
  • Mostafa Bentahir,
  • Yann Deccache,
  • Catherine Dumont,
  • Jean-François Durant,
  • Karim El Bakkouri,
  • Marie Gasasira Uwamahoro,
  • Benjamin Smits,
  • Nora Toufik,
  • Stéphane Van Cauwenberghe,
  • Khaled Ezzedine,
  • Eric D'Ortenzio,
  • Louis Pizarro,
  • Aurélie Etienne,
  • Jérémie Guedj,
  • Alexandra Fizet,
  • Eric Barte de Sainte Fare,
  • Bernadette Murgue,
  • Tuan Tran-Minh,
  • Christophe Rapp,
  • Pascal Piguet,
  • Marc Poncin,
  • Bertrand Draguez,
  • Thierry Allaford Duverger,
  • Solenne Barbe,
  • Guillaume Baret,
  • Isabelle Defourny,
  • Miles Carroll,
  • Hervé Raoul,
  • Augustin Augier,
  • Serge P Eholie,
  • Yazdan Yazdanpanah,
  • Claire Levy-Marchal,
  • Annick Antierrens,
  • Michel Van Herp,
  • Stephan Günther,
  • Xavier de Lamballerie,
  • Sakoba Keïta,
  • France Mentre,
  • Xavier Anglaret,
  • Denis Malvy,
  • JIKI Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1001967
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
p. e1001967

Abstract

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BackgroundEbola virus disease (EVD) is a highly lethal condition for which no specific treatment has proven efficacy. In September 2014, while the Ebola outbreak was at its peak, the World Health Organization released a short list of drugs suitable for EVD research. Favipiravir, an antiviral developed for the treatment of severe influenza, was one of these. In late 2014, the conditions for starting a randomized Ebola trial were not fulfilled for two reasons. One was the perception that, given the high number of patients presenting simultaneously and the very high mortality rate of the disease, it was ethically unacceptable to allocate patients from within the same family or village to receive or not receive an experimental drug, using a randomization process impossible to understand by very sick patients. The other was that, in the context of rumors and distrust of Ebola treatment centers, using a randomized design at the outset might lead even more patients to refuse to seek care. Therefore, we chose to conduct a multicenter non-randomized trial, in which all patients would receive favipiravir along with standardized care. The objectives of the trial were to test the feasibility and acceptability of an emergency trial in the context of a large Ebola outbreak, and to collect data on the safety and effectiveness of favipiravir in reducing mortality and viral load in patients with EVD. The trial was not aimed at directly informing future guidelines on Ebola treatment but at quickly gathering standardized preliminary data to optimize the design of future studies.Methods and findingsInclusion criteria were positive Ebola virus reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR) test, age ≥ 1 y, weight ≥ 10 kg, ability to take oral drugs, and informed consent. All participants received oral favipiravir (day 0: 6,000 mg; day 1 to day 9: 2,400 mg/d). Semi-quantitative Ebola virus RT-PCR (results expressed in "cycle threshold" [Ct]) and biochemistry tests were performed at day 0, day 2, day 4, end of symptoms, day 14, and day 30. Frozen samples were shipped to a reference biosafety level 4 laboratory for RNA viral load measurement using a quantitative reference technique (genome copies/milliliter). Outcomes were mortality, viral load evolution, and adverse events. The analysis was stratified by age and Ct value. A "target value" of mortality was defined a priori for each stratum, to guide the interpretation of interim and final analysis. Between 17 December 2014 and 8 April 2015, 126 patients were included, of whom 111 were analyzed (adults and adolescents, ≥13 y, n = 99; young children, ≤6 y, n = 12). Here we present the results obtained in the 99 adults and adolescents. Of these, 55 had a baseline Ct value ≥ 20 (Group A Ct ≥ 20), and 44 had a baseline Ct value ConclusionsIn the context of an outbreak at its peak, with crowded care centers, randomizing patients to receive either standard care or standard care plus an experimental drug was not felt to be appropriate. We did a non-randomized trial. This trial reaches nuanced conclusions. On the one hand, we do not conclude on the efficacy of the drug, and our conclusions on tolerance, although encouraging, are not as firm as they could have been if we had used randomization. On the other hand, we learned about how to quickly set up and run an Ebola trial, in close relationship with the community and non-governmental organizations; we integrated research into care so that it improved care; and we generated knowledge on EVD that is useful to further research. Our data illustrate the frequency of renal dysfunction and the powerful prognostic value of low Ct values. They suggest that drug trials in EVD should systematically stratify analyses by baseline Ct value, as a surrogate of viral load. They also suggest that favipiravir monotherapy merits further study in patients with medium to high viremia, but not in those with very high viremia.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT02329054.