Sweiti Hussein, Ekwunife Obinna, Jaschinski Thomas, Lhachimi Stefan K
Public Health, University Hospital Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany.
Surgical Department, Klinikum Frankfurt Höchst, Frankfurt, Germany.
Syst Rev. 2015 Nov 25;4:171. doi: 10.1186/s13643-015-0153-9.
The recent Ebola epidemic in western Africa developed into an acute public health emergency of unprecedented level in modern times. The treatment provided in most cases has been limited to supportive care, as no approved therapies are available to date. Several established, licenced drugs have been suggested as potential repurposed therapeutic agents for Ebola. However, scientific data on their efficacy in treating Ebola is limited. The purpose of this review is to systematically assess scientific evidence on potential drugs targeting Ebola. In specific, we aim to (1) identify drug library screens involving therapeutic agents targeting the Ebola virus, (2) list potential approved drugs identified from drug screens and review their mechanism of action against the Ebola virus and (3) summarise the outcome of preclinical and clinical trials investigating approved drugs targeting the Ebola virus.
METHODS/DESIGN: We will develop comprehensive systematic search strategies and will perform a systematic literature search in MEDLINE, Embase and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL). Two authors will independently screen the titles, abstracts and the references of all selected articles on the basis of inclusion criteria. These include any available drug screening, preclinical studies and clinical studies examining the efficacy of approved therapeutic agents targeting the Ebola virus. There will be no restrictions on the type of participants, the type of comparator, time or setting. Data extraction and quality assessment will be undertaken by two review authors working independently.
This systematic review will provide systematic knowledge on potential repurposed therapeutic agents targeting Ebola. It aims to help guide future investigations on repurposed drugs and avoid repetitive studies.
PROSPERO CRD42015024349.
近期西非的埃博拉疫情发展成为现代史上前所未有的急性公共卫生紧急事件。在大多数情况下,治疗仅限于支持性护理,因为迄今为止尚无获批的治疗方法。几种已上市的许可药物已被提议作为埃博拉潜在的重新利用的治疗药物。然而,关于它们治疗埃博拉疗效的科学数据有限。本综述的目的是系统评估针对埃博拉的潜在药物的科学证据。具体而言,我们旨在:(1)识别涉及针对埃博拉病毒治疗药物的药物文库筛选;(2)列出从药物筛选中确定的潜在获批药物,并综述它们针对埃博拉病毒的作用机制;(3)总结研究针对埃博拉病毒的获批药物的临床前和临床试验结果。
方法/设计:我们将制定全面的系统检索策略,并在医学文献数据库(MEDLINE)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(Embase)和考克兰系统评价数据库(Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials,CENTRAL)中进行系统的文献检索。两位作者将根据纳入标准独立筛选所有选定文章的标题、摘要和参考文献。这些标准包括任何可用的药物筛选、临床前研究和临床研究,这些研究考察了针对埃博拉病毒的获批治疗药物的疗效。对参与者类型、对照类型、时间或环境均无限制。数据提取和质量评估将由两位独立工作的综述作者进行。
本系统综述将提供关于针对埃博拉的潜在重新利用治疗药物的系统知识。其目的是帮助指导未来对重新利用药物的研究,并避免重复研究。
国际前瞻性系统评价注册库(PROSPERO)CRD42015024349。