Dr. Vladimir Zelenko and team announced that a retrospective study analyzing his patient data was accepted for publication after a rigorous peer review process.
By Roland Derwand, Martin Scholz, Vladimir Zelenko
Conclusion: Early treatment of COVID-19 in high risk patients with “The Zelenko Protocol” decreased hospitalizations by 84% and resulted in a 5-fold reduction in death.
NEW YORK, Oct. 29, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Dr. Vladimir Zelenko and team announced today that a retrospective study analyzing his patient data was accepted for publication after a rigorous peer review process.1 The study finds that early intervention and treatment of high-risk patients with COVID-19 resulted in significantly fewer hospitalizations and deaths. The treatment consisting of zinc, low-dose hydroxychloroquine, and azithromycin, is also referred to as “The Zelenko Protocol.”
This study is unique because only HIGH RISK out-patients were treated with the triple-drug regimen. High-risk patients are those that have a 5% to 10% chance of dying from COVID-19. This category includes patients who are older than 60, who are younger than 60 but have other medical issues, or who have trouble breathing. All identified high-risk outpatients were treated at their initial visit, most within the first five days of the onset of symptoms. All these patients had laboratory confirmation of COVID-19 infection.
This retrospective analysis is the product of the unique collaboration of three doctors with a rare synergy of industry, academia, and clinical medicine. Dr. Roland Derwand is a German physician and life science industry expert. Professor Martin Scholz is an independent consultant and adjunct professor for experimental medicine at Heinrich Heine University, Düsseldorf, Germany. Drs. Derwand and Scholz were the first to draw attention to “The Zelenko Protocol” in their published hypothesis paper about the importance of combining zinc with hydroxychloroquine as a method for treating COVID-19.
“What differentiates this study is that patients were diagnosed very early with COVID-19 in an outpatient setting, and only high-risk patients were treated early on,” said Dr. Derwand. “Unfortunately, we seem to have forgotten common medical knowledge - that we want to treat any patient with an infectious disease as soon as possible. Dr. Zelenko treated his high-risk patients immediately with the three-drug regimen to ensure sufficient efficacy. He correctly didn’t wait for the disease to further develop.”
Following the rigorous peer review process, Dr. Zelenko said: “It’s unfortunate that much of the media coverage surrounding hydroxychloroquine has been negative. These three medications are affordable, available in pill form, and work in synergy against COVID-19.” According to Dr. Zelenko: “Hydroxychloroquine’s main role is to allow zinc to enter the cell and inhibit the virus’ reproduction. And azithromycin prevents secondary bacterial infection in the lungs and reduces the risk of pulmonary complications.”
The third author, Professor Scholz added: “This is the first study with COVID-19 outpatients that shows how a simple-to-perform outpatient risk stratification allows for rapid treatment decisions shortly after onset of symptoms. The well-tolerated 5-day triple therapy resulted in a significantly lower hospitalization rate and less fatalities with no reported cardiac side effects compared with relevant public reference data of untreated patients. The magnitude of the results can substantially elevate the relevance of early use, low-dose hydroxychloroquine, especially in combination with zinc. This data can be used to inform ongoing pandemic response policies as well as future clinical trials.”
1) Derwand, R., Scholz, M., Zelenko, V. COVID-19 outpatients – early risk-stratified treatment with zinc plus low dose hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin: a retrospective case series study. Int. J. Antimicrob. Agents (2020), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijantimicag.2020.106214
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SOURCE Zelenko Protocol