- Naggie, Susanna;
- Milstone, Aaron;
- Castro, Mario;
- Collins, Sean P;
- Lakshmi, Seetha;
- Anderson, Deverick J;
- Cahuayme-Zuniga, Lizbeth;
- Turner, Kisha Batey;
- Cohen, Lauren W;
- Currier, Judith;
- Fraulo, Elizabeth;
- Friedland, Anne;
- Garg, Jyotsna;
- George, Anoop;
- Mulder, Hillary;
- Olson, Rachel E;
- O'Brien, Emily C;
- Rothman, Russell L;
- Shenkman, Elizabeth;
- Shostak, Jack;
- Woods, Christopher W;
- Anstrom, Kevin J;
- Hernandez, Adrian F;
- Program, HERO Research
Objectives
To determine whether hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) is safe and effective at preventing COVID-19 infections among health care workers (HCWs).Methods
In a 1: 1 randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, parallel-group, superiority trial at 34 US clinical centers, 1360 HCWs at risk for COVID-19 infection were enrolled between April and November 2020. Participants were randomized to HCQ or matched placebo. The HCQ dosing included a loading dose of HCQ 600 mg twice on day 1, followed by 400 mg daily for 29 days. The primary outcome was a composite of confirmed or suspected COVID-19 clinical infection by day 30, defined as new-onset fever, cough, or dyspnea and either a positive SARS-CoV-2 polymerase chain reaction test (confirmed) or a lack of confirmatory testing due to local restrictions (suspected).Results
Study enrollment closed before full accrual due to recruitment challenges. The primary end point occurred in 41 (6.0%) participants receiving HCQ and 53 (7.8%) participants receiving placebo. No difference in the proportion of participants experiencing clinical infection (estimated difference of -1.8%, 95% confidence interval -4.6-0.9%, P = 0.20) was identified nor any significant safety issues.Conclusion
Oral HCQ taken as prescribed appeared safe among HCWs. No significant clinical benefits were observed. The study was not powered to detect a small but potentially important reduction in infection.Trial registration
NCT04334148.