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COVID-19 hypothesis: Activated protein C for therapy of virus-induced pathologic thromboinflammation.

John H GriffinPatrick Lyden
Published in: Research and practice in thrombosis and haemostasis (2020)
Seriously ill patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) at risk for death exhibit elevated cytokine and chemokine levels and D-dimer, and they often have comorbidities related to vascular dysfunctions. In preclinical studies, activated protein C (APC) provides negative feedback downregulation of excessive inflammation and thrombin generation, attenuates damage caused by ischemia-reperfusion in many organs including lungs, and reduces death caused by bacterial pneumonia. APC exerts both anticoagulant activities and direct cell-signaling activities. Preclinical studies show that its direct cell-signaling actions mediate anti-inflammatory and anti-apoptotic actions, mortality reduction for pneumonia, and beneficial actions for ischemia-reperfusion injury. The APC mutant 3K3A-APC, which was engineered to have diminished anticoagulant activity while retaining cell-signaling actions, was safe in phase 1 and phase 2 human trials. Because of its broad spectrum of homeostatic effects in preclinical studies, we speculate that 3K3A-APC merits consideration for clinical trial studies in appropriately chosen, seriously ill patients with COVID-19.
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