Arentz Susan, Hunter Jennifer, Yang Guoyan, Goldenberg Joshua, Beardsley Jennifer, Myers Stephen P, Mertz Dominik, Leeder Stephen
NICM Health Research Institute, Western Sydney University, Penrith, New South Wales, Australia.
Helfgott Research Institute, National University of Natural Medicine, Portland, Oregon, United States.
Adv Integr Med. 2020 Dec;7(4):252-260. doi: 10.1016/j.aimed.2020.07.009. Epub 2020 Aug 1.
The global COVID-19 pandemic has prompted an urgent search for interventions to prevent and treat SARS-CoV-2. Higher risk of infection and adverse outcomes coincide with populations with chronic diseases and elderly who are at risk of zinc deficiency. Through several mechanisms zinc may prevent, reduce severity and duration of symptoms.
An a protocol was registered with PROSPERO on 27th April 2020 (CRD42020182044). Eight databases (one Chinese) and four clinical trial registries (one Chinese) were searched for randomised and quasi-randomised controlled trials (RCTs), evaluating single or adjunct zinc against placebo or active controls, for prevention and/or treatment of SARS-CoV-2, other coronaviruses or related infections. RR constraints included not searching bibliographies or contacting authors, single reviewers with calibration and second reviewer checking, meta-analyses and quality appraisal of critical and study primary outcomes only and reporting results as they became available.
118 publications of 1,627 records met the inclusion criteria (35 Chinese and 83 English publications), 32 for prevention, 78 for treatment and 8 for both. Four RCTs specific to SARS-CoV-2 are ongoing; two are investigating zinc for prevention and two for treatment. As of 7 July 2020, no results were available. A wide range of zinc forms, including nasal spray/gel, lozenges, liquid, tablets and intramuscular were investigated.
Currently, indirect evidence suggests zinc may potentially reduce the risk, duration and severity of SARS-CoV-2 infections, particularly for populations at risk of zinc deficiency including people with chronic disease co-morbidities and older adults. Direct evidence to determine if zinc is effective for either prevention or treatment of SARS-CoV-2 is pending. In the interim, assessing zinc status of people with chronic diseases and older adults, as part of a SARS-CoV-2 clinical work-up, is reasonable as both groups have a higher risk of zinc deficiency/insufficiency and poorer outcomes from SARS-CoV-2.
全球新冠疫情促使人们迫切寻找预防和治疗新冠病毒的干预措施。感染风险较高以及不良后果与患有慢性病的人群和有锌缺乏风险的老年人相吻合。锌可能通过多种机制预防、减轻症状的严重程度并缩短症状持续时间。
2020年4月27日在国际前瞻性系统评价注册库(PROSPERO)登记了一项方案(CRD42020182044)。检索了八个数据库(一个中文数据库)和四个临床试验注册库(一个中文注册库),以查找随机和半随机对照试验(RCT),评估单一或辅助使用锌与安慰剂或活性对照相比,用于预防和/或治疗新冠病毒、其他冠状病毒或相关感染的效果。纳入标准限制包括不检索参考文献或联系作者,由单一评审员进行校准并由第二位评审员进行检查,仅对关键和主要研究结果进行荟萃分析和质量评估,并在结果可得时进行报告。
1627条记录中的118篇出版物符合纳入标准(35篇中文出版物和83篇英文出版物),其中32篇用于预防,78篇用于治疗,8篇用于两者。四项针对新冠病毒的随机对照试验正在进行中;两项研究锌用于预防,两项研究锌用于治疗。截至2020年7月7日,尚无结果。研究了多种锌制剂形式,包括鼻喷雾剂/凝胶、含片、液体、片剂和肌肉注射剂。
目前,间接证据表明锌可能会降低新冠病毒感染的风险、持续时间和严重程度,特别是对于有锌缺乏风险的人群,包括患有慢性病合并症的人和老年人。确定锌对预防或治疗新冠病毒是否有效的直接证据尚未得出。在此期间,作为新冠病毒临床检查的一部分,评估慢性病患者和老年人的锌状态是合理的,因为这两组人群锌缺乏/不足的风险较高,且感染新冠病毒后的后果较差。