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Sarilumab is an anti-interleukin-6 human monoclonal antibody, such as tocilizumab, which is administered subcutaneously every two weeks for the treatment of moderate to severe active rheumatoid arthritis in adult patients. Despite the effectiveness reported for tocilizumab in the recently published experiences, the need to rapidly find alternative therapies to manage the complications of Covid-19 infection remains extremely high. The lack of clinical experience on the usage of sarilumab in such patients prevents the possibility of adopting early access programs for using commercially available sarilumab (prefilled syringe) packs in patients with severe Covid-19 pneumonia. The present study is aimed to generate a rapid, still robustly documented, evidence on the potential clinical efficacy and tolerability of a further IL-6R antagonist in Covid-19 pneumonia.
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In February 2020, the emergence of the COVID-19 epidemic in Italy and, especially, in Lombardy, with a potential fatal outcome in a significant proportion of cases, determined the need for adopting new therapeutic approached based on the few data available in literature. Although there are no clinical data available in COVID-19 patients concomitantly treated with Sarilumab subcutaneously (SC) nor intravenously (IV), there is scientific rationale that supports the exploration of sarilumab to treat pulmonary complications related to Covid-195-6. By inhibiting interleukin-6 (IL-6)signaling, sarilumab may potentially interrupt cytokine-mediated pulmonary injury precipitated by infection with SARS-CoV-2 and thereby ameliorate severity and/or reduce mortality among patients presenting with Covid-19 pneumonia when administered in conjunction with antiviral therapy. given the apparent dose/dose pharmacokinetic/ pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) equivalence of 400 mg of tocilizumab to 400 mg of sarilumab, we propose a dose escalation protocol by which the first 5 included patients will be treated with a dosage of 200 mg of sarilumab IV as 1st dose, followed by clinical reassessment after 12 hours and in case of no major adverse events and lack of improvement in respiratory function and / or persistence of fever and persistently high inflammatory markers re-administration of 200 mg intravenous (IV) of sarilumab. If no patients showed unfavorable safety signals, and no clear improvement is detected in >50% of the initially treated five patients after 96 hours since last administration, the dosage will be increase to sarilumab 400 mg IV as first and second dose in the remaining patients.
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