Publication:
COVID-19 pneumonia treated with ultra-low doses of radiotherapy (ULTRA-COVID study): a single institution report of two cases.

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Date

2021-01-27

Authors

Moreno-Olmedo, Elena
Suárez-Gironzini, Vladimir
Pérez, Manuel
Filigheddu, Teresa
Mínguez, Cristina
Sanjuan-Sanjuan, Alba
González, José A
Rivas, Daniel
Gorospe, Luis
Larrea, Luis

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Abstract

Since the outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, healthcare systems have focused their efforts into finding a treatment to avoid the fatal outcomes of severe acute respiratory syndrome due to coronavirus‑2 (SARS-CoV-2). Benefits and risks of systemic treatments remain unclear, with multiple clinical trials still ongoing. Radiotherapy could play a role in reducing the inflammatory response in the lungs and relieve life-threatening symptoms. We designed a prospective study of Ultra-Low Doses of Therapy with Radiation Applied to COVID-19 (ULTRA-COVID) for patients who suffer pneumonia, are not candidates for invasive mechanical ventilation and show no improvement with medical therapy. We present the preliminary results of two patients diagnosed with COVID-19 pneumonia treated with ULTRA-COVID. After one radiotherapy session, significant clinical response and a good radiological response was observed in both cases, resulting in both patients being discharged from hospital in less than 2 weeks after radiation treatment. Preliminary clinical and radiological results suggest a potential benefit of treating COVID-19 pneumonia with ULTRA-COVID. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04394182.

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Aged
Aged, 80 and over
COVID-19
Female
Humans
Male
Preliminary Data
Prospective Studies
Radiotherapy
Radiotherapy Dosage
SARS-CoV-2
Treatment Outcome

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Keywords

COVID-19 pneumonitis, Cytokine storm, Inflamatory response, Radiation, SARS-CoV-2

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