Nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal rinses with neutral electrolyzed water prevents COVID-19 in front-line health professionals: A randomized, open-label, controlled trial in a general hospital in Mexico City.

COVID-19 SARS-CoV-2 mouthwashes nasal rinses neutral electrolyzed water prophylaxis

Journal

Biomedical reports
ISSN: 2049-9442
Titre abrégé: Biomed Rep
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101613227

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Feb 2022
Historique:
received: 29 08 2021
accepted: 04 11 2021
entrez: 6 1 2022
pubmed: 7 1 2022
medline: 7 1 2022
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The worldwide efforts that healthcare professionals are making in the COVID-19 pandemic is well known, and the high risk of illness and death that front-line staff experience on a daily basis is a reality, despite well-defined protocols for the use of personal protective equipment. In addition, it is well known that vaccination is still faraway to be achieved worldwide and that new variants are emerging, thus additional protective measures must be explored. A prospective open-label randomized controlled clinical trial was performed on front-line medical staff from the Dr. Enrique Cabrera General Hospital in México City to evaluate the effectiveness of nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal rinses with a neutral electrolyzed water, known as SES, to reduce the risk of COVID-19 disease among front-line, not vaccinated medical staff. A total of 170 volunteers were enrolled and equally divided in a control group and SES group. All members of the trial wore the adequate personal protection equipment at all times while performing their duties, as required by standard COVID-19 safety protocols. Additionally, the SES group participants followed a prophylactic protocol with SES (oral and nasal rinses, three times a day for 4 weeks). All participants were monitored for COVID-19 symptoms and disease in a time-frame of 4 weeks and the incidence of illness per group was registered. The relative risk of disease, associated with each treatment was calculated. The presence of COVID-19-positive cases, in the group that received the nasal and oral rinses with SES was 1.2%, while in the group that did not do the SES rinses (control group), it was 12.7% (P=0.0039 and RR=0.09405; 95% CI of 0.01231-0.7183). The prophylactic protocol was demonstrated as a protective factor, in more than 90%, for developing the disease, and without adverse effects. Nasal and oral rinses with SES may be an efficient alternative to reinforce the protective measures against COVID-19 disease and should be further investigated. The present clinical trial was retrospectively registered in the Cuban public registry of clinical trials (RPCEC) database (March 16, 2021; PREVECOVID-19: RPCEC00000357).

Identifiants

pubmed: 34987795
doi: 10.3892/br.2021.1494
pii: BR-16-2-01494
pmc: PMC8719325
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

11

Informations de copyright

Copyright: © Gutiérrez-García et al.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

The authors RGG, JCA and IDE declare that they have no competing interests. ACL, NMS and BPM state that they are employees at Esteripharma S.A. de C.V. company but did not participate in the decision to publish the results of the study, nor in the selection of the volunteers or in its development.

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Auteurs

Rafael Gutiérrez-García (R)

Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Dr. Enrique Cabrera General Hospital, Mexico City 01620, Mexico.

Juan C De La Cerda-Ángeles (JC)

Department of Medical Direction, Dr. Enrique Cabrera General Hospital, Mexico City 01620, Mexico.

Ariana Cabrera-Licona (A)

Department of Research and Industrial Property, Esteripharma S.A. de C.V., Estado de México 50450, Mexico.

Ivan Delgado-Enciso (I)

Department of Molecular Medicine, School of Medicine, Universidad de Colima, Colima 28040, Mexico.
Cancerology State Institute, Colima State Health Services, Colima 28085, Mexico.

Nicolas Mervitch-Sigal (N)

Department of Medical Direction, Esteripharma México S.A. de C.V., México City 03100, Mexico.

Brenda A Paz-Michel (BA)

Department of Research and Industrial Property, Esteripharma S.A. de C.V., Estado de México 50450, Mexico.
Department of Molecular Medicine, School of Medicine, Universidad de Colima, Colima 28040, Mexico.

Classifications MeSH