Hydrogen Peroxide as an Adjuvant Therapy for COVID-19: A Case Series of Patients and Caregivers in the Mexico City Metropolitan Area

This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Associated Data

Data are not available for patient privacy and confidentiality motives.

Abstract

Knowledge of the antiseptic effects of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) dates back to the late 19th century, and its mechanisms of action has been amply described. Globally, many physicians have reported using H2O2 successfully, in different modalities, against COVID-19. Given its anti-infective and oxygenating properties, hydrogen peroxide may offer prophylactic and therapeutic applications for responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. We report a consecutive case series of twenty-three COVID-19 patients (of 36 initially enrolled) who had been diagnosed by their primary care physician (mean age: 39, range: 8 months–70 years; 74% male) and twenty-eight caregivers in the Mexico City Metropolitan Area who received a complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) telemedicine treatment with H2O2 taken by mouth (PO, at a concentration of 0.06%), oral rinse (mouthwash, 1.5%), and/or nebulization (0.2%). We describe the treatment program and report the response of the COVID-19 patients and their caregivers. The patients mainly recovered well, reporting feeling “completely better” at 9.5 days on average. Two (9%) were hospitalized prior to joining the study, and one did not fully recover. Patients frequently reported nausea and sometimes dizziness or vomiting related to the oral treatment. None of the twenty-eight caregivers in close contact with the patients reported contracting COVID-19. Given its low cost and medical potential and considering its relative safety if used properly, we suggest that randomized controlled trials should be conducted. These should include both SARS-CoV-2-positive and SARS-CoV-2-negative participants, with single or combined modes of administration of H2O2, to study the benefits of this simple molecule and offer safe guidance regarding its use by health professionals.

1. Introduction

A case series is described on twenty-three ambulatory patients diagnosed with COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) and monitored by telemedicine, using an adjuvant therapy of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), administered PO (per orem), by mouth rinses (oral gargles), and by inhalation routes. We report the clinical outcomes of the consecutive COVID-19 patients and their caregivers, who were treated by our medical team between May 11 and July 19, 2020.

Among other things, the team conducted a nonexhaustive review of the scientific literature to identify possible therapeutic and prophylactic alternatives. This review was supplemented by literature from the complementary, traditional, and integrative medicine fields. Our aim was to identify nonstandard therapeutic alternatives for treating viral infections, such as COVID-19, that could be easily and cheaply attained in Mexico over the counter and aid in the primary health response to the pandemic. With these requisites in mind, we identified this clinically useful molecule, hydrogen peroxide.

Dating back to 1888, Love et al. reported the use of hydrogen peroxide as an anti-infectious agent and described it as effective in treating numerous diseases including scarlet fever, diphtheria, runny nose, coryza, whooping cough, asthma, hay fever, and tonsillitis [1]. Specifically for viral diseases that attack the respiratory system, the first reported medical success using hydrogen peroxide therapy dates back exactly 100 years, when doctors Oliver and Murphy reported in The Lancet how they had successfully applied intravenous hydrogen peroxide to treat a group of patients with influenza; they reduced by half the mortality among this group of patients, which consisted of troops from the Indian army during the 1918-1919 Spanish Flu pandemic in the Mesopotamian valley [2].

Although the use of hydrogen peroxide therapeutically has generated great controversy in alternative medicine [3], this ubiquitous molecule is not just one of the many components that help regulate the amount of oxygen that reaches cells, but its presence is vital for a variety of other functions of the body. Many positive effects of hydrogen peroxide on the immune system response have been described, including the stimulation of monocytes and T-helper cells which help fight infections, the increased production of interferon-gamma, which has a role in immunoregulation, and the effect of decreasing the activity of B cells, which have a role in up-regulating the inflammatory response [4].

Known in medical terms as oxidative therapy or bio-oxidative therapy, hydrogen peroxide is a simple, well-studied, and useful molecule for a range of medical and sanitary applications. Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) contains one more atom of oxygen than water (H2O) and is naturally produced in the human organism as a by-product of oxygen metabolism. It is metabolized by enzymes known as peroxidases and catalases, which decompose low concentrations of hydrogen peroxide into water and a free oxygen ion. “Hydrogen peroxide appears to be a ubiquitous molecule. We exhale it, excrete it and take it in from diet” [4]. It is produced endogenously for many functions of living organisms, and there is an abundance of scientific knowledge on this molecule, with sufficient documentation on its uses for sanitation, sterilization, and, importantly, diverse therapeutic modalities.

Given that the H2O2 molecule decomposes into water (H2O) and oxygen (O − ), in appropriate doses, it is relatively safe for animal and human uses, as well as relatively nontoxic. In the late 1980s, Farr reported that hydrogen peroxide offers therapeutic benefits by directly destroying microorganisms through dual oxidative and oxygenating actions, caused by the released oxygen molecules [5, 6]. In more recent times, hydrogen peroxide has been widely hailed for use in the so-called “oxygenation therapy” in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), several types of cancer, heart and blood vessel diseases, immune disorders, infectious or pulmonary diseases, and many other ailments and conditions.

H2O2 has also been used in dentistry, alone or combined with other salts, since the start of the century [7, 8]. In a recent review, Marshall, Cancro, and Fischman have described scarce side effects on soft tissues after using 1%–1.5% H2O2 as a daily rinse, with over two years of follow-up. They report an in vitro study that found that 3% H2O2 effectively inactivated many virus types, discovering that “coronaviruses and influenza viruses were the most sensitive” [8]. They further state that “since SARS-CoV-2 is vulnerable to oxidation, preprocedural mouth rinses containing oxidative agents such as 1% H2O2 have been suggested to reduce the salivary viral load” [8].

Brownstein et al. from Wayne State University School of Medicine, who has been applying oxidative therapies for over two decades, recently reported a novel treatment program combining nutritional and oxidative therapies against COVID-19. They used hydrogen peroxide to successfully treat the signs and symptoms of patients diagnosed with COVID-19 [9]. They base their treatments on a combination of oral, intravenous, intramuscular, and nebulized hydrogen peroxide. Their approach has resulted in zero deaths and the recovery of 107 COVID-19 patients [9].

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and other official health agencies have also approved the use of hydrogen peroxide as a disinfectant for medical equipment and facilities that have been in contact with the SARS-CoV-2 [10]. In vitro studies demonstrate the efficacy of H2O2 in the vapor phase as a viricide against pathogenic viruses such as SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV [11]. Other studies, regarding viral inactivation in surfaces using diverse disinfectants, including hydrogen peroxide, have also been reported [12, 13].

Recently, the medical hypothesis that hydrogen peroxide is effective against the COVID-19 coronavirus, as well as other viral pathogens and bacteria, has been further advanced [14, 15]. Caruso et al. on the front lines against the COVID-19 outbreaks in Naples, Italy, recommend the need for clinical protocols and research on oxidative therapies regarding COVID-19 [14]. After review of the literature, they propose that the application of hydrogen peroxide to the epithelial cells of the nose, mouth, and throat could well be “extremely effective” against viruses, including SARS-CoV-2 [15]. Gansky's clinical trial at UCSF titled “Effect of antiseptic mouthwash/gargling solutions and pre-procedural rinse on SARS-CoV-2 load” is another example of current research on the subject [16].

The Italian group further proposes that a COVID-19 disinfection regimen by gargling with hydrogen peroxide through mouth rinses (and gargles), two to three times a day, could be useful for the disinfection of COVID-19 from the oral cavity. They also recommended nasal washes with a peroxide nebulizer two times a day. In their opinion, “the effectiveness of hydrogen peroxide-based therapeutic regimen would be verifiable by a significant reduction in the rate of hospitalizations and respiratory complications in patients positive to SARS-CoV-2” [14, 15]. Gansky's clinical trial at UCSF titled “Effect of antiseptic mouthwash/gargling solutions and pre-procedural rinse on SARS-CoV-2 load” is another example of current research on the subject [32].

A further example is Khan et al.'s clinical trial of gargling agents in reducing intraoral viral load among COVID-19 patients based in Pakistan [17]. This quadruple blind trial provides useful information because it is randomized and controlled, and one of their treatments is a 1% hydrogen peroxide gargle. The study design, which includes patients in parallel groups, using diverse types of gargles and nasal lavages, has as outcome measure the intraoral viral load of SARS-CoV-2, and their results will test the hypothesis of H2O2's usefulness for handling the current pandemic, especially in overburdened areas currently suffering consecutive waves of COVID-19 transmission.

Given the public health emergency facing Mexico and what ethics mandate from us as physicians, being aware of the increased demand expected for healthcare services in Mexico [18], as well as the absence of effective and approved therapeutic regimens, we hypothesized that hydrogen peroxide, an antiseptic agent, could play a pivotal role in reducing the severity and duration of the illness in patients and also preventing transmission among caregivers and close contacts. We therefore provided ambulatory treatment using hydrogen peroxide as a complementary therapeutic alternative for twenty-three COVID-19 patients. This treatment was extended in a prophylactic modality to twenty-eight caregivers or persons in close contact with the patients.

Here, we present a case series with our findings and provide some insight and recommendations, which could be useful to the scientific community as an adjuvant treatment during the pandemic's evolution as it affects different countries.

2. Materials and Methods

This was a single-center case series. All patient consultations were provided in an ambulatory care setting by telemedicine, using traditional telephone calls and WhatsApp messaging. Medical consultations were provided by licensed physicians from the Faculty of Health Sciences, Anahuac University Mexico, along with five recent medical graduates, and from a private hospital in Mexico City.

Inclusion criteria were symptomatic patients having a COVID-19 diagnosis made by their primary care physician, with a prescribed medical treatment; positive RT-PCR (reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction), computed tomography (CT) scan, or chest X-rays suggestive of COVID-19; having access to a healthcare service provider; consent to participate in telemedicine service; agreement on daily follow-up calls; providing informed consent for the ambulatory telemedical management of their condition with the use of hydrogen peroxide as a complementary experimental alternative; and not being in a serious stage of the illness, nor presence of symptoms of severe respiratory distress that requires hospitalization.

Of the initial 36 patients enrolled, two cases were excluded due to loss of follow-up, five were excluded due to nonacceptance of the adjuvant treatment with hydrogen peroxide, one discontinued the treatment, three did not provide test results, and one was misdiagnosed with COVID-19. This meant that only 23 of the initial patients fit the inclusion criteria for this case series report.

Information collected included age, sex, date of birth, initial date of symptoms, care provider, medical history, medications, and supplements taken. The number of days of illness before being recruited into this treatment program was also documented. For chest X-ray images and CT scans, we used the reports provided by radiologists and validated the images ourselves. SARS-CoV-2 testing was done by a professional using RT-PCR by independent laboratories and nasal swab sampling.

A concentrated solution of 30 mL of tridistilled or ultrapure hydrogen peroxide at a concentration of 35% (115 volumes) was provided to each patient and each caregiver in 30 ml droppers. Given the risk of misuse because of the oxidizing corrosive nature of the concentrated H2O2 solution, precise instructions on preparing the dilutions were given both verbally and in writing (described in Table 1 ). Purified bottled water or simple tap water was used to dilute the H2O2. Patients and caregivers were required to purchase a commercially available nebulizer for respiratory treatment. Clinical monitors accompanied caregivers and patients via phone calls during the opening of the packaging and accompanied the preparation process to ensure the adequate knowledge and use of the solution and preparation for each different administration route.

Table 1

Patient and caregiver instructions per administration route.

RouteFrequencyDurationOther indications
Per orem (0.06% H2O2) (0.2 vol.)Every 8 hours16 daysDiluted in bottled or tap water, as tolerated
Nebulized (0.2% H2O2) (0.7 vol.)Every 4 to 8 hours for 5 to 15 minutes as tolerated, or hourly until improvement16 daysDiluted in bottled or tap water. Nebulized (not vaporized) in containers from 10 to 30 mL with cold nebulization devices
Prophylactic mouth rinsing and gargles (1.5% H2O2) (4.95 vol.)Gargle for 30 seconds in oral cavity and 30 seconds in the back of the throat, every 8 to 12 hoursDailyDiluted in clean tap water

Patient and caregiver interventions included a basic training for measurement of temperature, oxygenation, respiratory frequency, and cardiac rate and keeping a record of clinical signs and symptoms. Both the oral and nebulized administration were given depending on each patient's tolerance. We made a note of adverse effects such as nausea, pharyngeal or nasal irritation, and vomiting. As the symptoms improved, the oral intake and the nebulizing could be reduced by the patient, coordinated by the clinical monitors and attending physicians. Whenever patients presented severe clinical deterioration (oxygen saturation

Disease progression was evaluated based on clinical criteria: first improvement (or feeling of improvement endpoint) was defined as the positive change that each of the patients report to the clinical monitor during the daily follow-up interview. Clinical monitors were trained to recognize this positive change when the patient, during the interview, in addition to spontaneously reporting a feeling of improvement, reported a decrease in the following symptoms: headache, asthenia/adynamia, general discomfort, and dyspnea/shortness of breath. Completely better or clinical remission of symptoms endpoint was defined as the total or almost total absence of any of the following symptoms during the daily follow-up interview for each case: headache, asthenia/adynamia, general discomfort, and dyspnea/shortness of breath. This second endpoint entails the clinical remission of symptoms and therefore allows the clinical monitor to declare the end of the acute period of the disease.

Antipyretics and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs were used as each clinical case required. Concomitant medications for comorbidities were also continued as managed by their usual healthcare providers. Additional medications used by patients included antiretrovirals, antibiotics, and in two cases hydroxychloroquine.

3. Results

The baseline characteristics of the patients are described in Table 2 . The age ranged from 8 months to 70 years with a mean age of 39 years. Six patients were female (26%) and 17 male (74%). Three patients were active smokers and two were passive smokers. Seven (30%) patients were overweight and two (9%) were obese according to body mass index (BMI); body measurements were not available for the rest of the patients. The major comorbidities included systemic arterial hypertension (22%), diabetes mellitus (17%), and gastroesophageal reflux (17%).

Table 2

Case series with H2O2 management: characteristics of the patients.

Patient characteristicsNumberPercent
Total patients23100
Age
Range8 months–70 years
Average age39
Median age39
Gender
No. of males1774
No. of females626
Comorbid conditions
Never smoked1461
Normal weight1148
Overweight730
Hypertension522
Ceased smokers417
Diabetes417
Gastroesophageal reflux disease/gastropathy417
Active smokers313
Passive smokers29
Obese29
Hypothyroidism14
Cancer14
Hyperuricemia14

The clinical symptoms are illustrated in Table 3 . The most common symptoms were cough, headaches, and weakness (asthenia/adynamia).

Table 3

Symptoms for total sample of patients (n = 23).

SymptomsNumberPercent
Cough2087
Headaches1983
Asthenia, adynamia1983
Malaise1565
Myalgia or arthralgia1461
Chills1357
Fatigue1148
Gastrointestinal symptoms (diarrhea, vomiting, anorexia, hematochezia, loose stools, pain)1043
Dyspnea1043
Fever835
Odynophagia626
Pneumonia626
Anosmia522
Upper respiratory infections417
Dizziness29
Conjunctival inflammation (eye redness)29
Palpitations14

As seen in Table 4 , among the confirmed COVID-19 patients, the most common symptoms were also cough, headache, and asthenic/adynamic feeling. Fever was present in 4 patients (36%) while pneumonia was diagnosed in 2 patients.

Table 4

Symptoms for laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 patients (n = 11).

Symptoms among COVID-19 positive cohortNumberPercent
Headache982
Cough982
Asthenia, adynamia982
Myalgia or arthralgia873
Malaise873
Chills764
Fatigue764
Fever436
Upper respiratory infections218
Gastrointestinal symptoms (diarrhea, vomiting, anorexia, hematochezia, loose stools, pain)218
Dyspnea shortness of breath218
Pneumonia218
Odynophagia19
Conjunctival inflammation (eye redness)19

Table 5 presents the diagnostic and imaging studies performed on the 23 patients and a summary of the disease course for all of them. Twelve patients were tested for COVID-19 with RT-PCR and 92% were positive. Fourteen had imaging (chest X-ray or CT scan) studies. For comparison purposes, the symptomatology of the whole group of patients will be presented separately from symptoms in the laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases. Most patients did not have complementary laboratory studies (it is important to know that over half of these patients had limited resources). Two patients presented deteriorating conditions and were hospitalized. None of the 23 patients died.

Table 5

Clinical course, laboratory, and imaging studies (n = 23).

Studies performed and disease courseNumberPercent
Tested for COVID-19 (labs only)1252
Tested positive for COVID-19 (RT-PCR)1192
With chest X-ray or CT scan1461
Without chest X-ray or CT scan939
With laboratory studies313
Without laboratory studies2087
Hospitalized29
Death00
Days
First improvement average days (min–max)2.5 (1–8)
Mostly better average days (min–max)6.2 (2–11)
Completely better average days (min–max)9.5 (3–15)

On average, most patients felt the first improvements within the first two and a half days since starting the experimental H2O2 treatment. Patients were “mostly better” at an average of 6.2 days, and patients were “completely better” in an average of 9.5 days. Symptomatology was mostly better within 2 to 11 days and completely better from 3 to 15 days for the most part.

Table 6 presents the hydrogen peroxide treatment modality received by patients and lists concomitant classes of medications that were administered during the course of the disease. Most patients received a full spectrum of pharmacologic support with antimicrobials, analgesics, and antipyretics. Seven patients received antivirals and two patients were reported to receive hydroxychloroquine.

Table 6

H2O2 and conventional pharmacological treatments used by patients.

Patient interventionsNumberPercent
Oral H2O22296
Nebulized H2O21774
Mouth rinse/gargles23100
Antimicrobials23100
Analgesics/antipyretics23100
Antiacid drugs (gastric mucosa protection)23100
Respiratory support (O2 supplementation)1357
Antivirals730
Corticosteroids626
Vitamin supplements417

Figure 1 illustrates the disease course for the twenty-three consecutive patients, ranked by length of the SARS-CoV-2 disease duration. The vertical axis is the patient number, and the horizontal axis represents the days since clinical onset of the disease. Patients are ordered by duration of disease and not by consecutive appearance. Patient #1 was the first to enter the case series on May 1 st , and patient 36 was the last to enter the series on June 20 th . Patient #36 was the last to exit the series on July 20 th . Two patients entered the treatment protocol after being released from the hospital for COVID-19 disease. Patient #12 had been hospitalized for 5 days and, after being stabilized, was sent home to continue as outpatient when he entered the study. Patient #36 had also been stabilized after 12-day hospitalization, but his symptoms continued for five days after discharge. He was accepted for treatment and reported a first improvement on the third day and complete recovery five days later.

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc. Object name is ECAM2021-5592042.001.jpg

Timeline and disease course of twenty-three consecutive COVID-19 patients with CAM management.

The graphic displays in shades of gray the presence or absence of clinical symptoms as well as the start and end of the hydrogen peroxide treatment. It also illustrates additional clinical events of relevance. Key milestones for the evolution of each case are also presented and include presence or absence of clinical symptoms (gray shading), start and end of hydrogen peroxide treatment (arrows), day of first improvement (triangle) and day of feeling “completely better” (circle), hospitalization days (letter H), confirmatory RT-PCR exam (dot), positive serum antibody exam (diamond), and confirmatory CT scan or X-ray (plus sign).

Table 7 presents a summary of adverse effects from the use of hydrogen peroxide. It includes details regarding the gender and age of the patients, the date and time of the effect, and the route of administration, also, the type and severity of the adverse effect, possible causes, if it represented a security problem, countermeasures taken, and consequences or after-effects. Eight patients reported twelve episodes of mild adverse effects, half from the oral and half from the nebulized routes of administration. Out of six adverse effect reports from oral administration, five were possibly not related to the use of H2O2. These patients were similar in that they reported gastroesophageal symptoms prior to administration or were using several PO medications simultaneously, without gastric protection. Out of the six adverse effect reports from the nebulized route of administration, four were possibly not related to the use of H2O2 and two were due to accidental misuse. All adverse effects had complete recovery, with no after-effects.

Table 7

Summary of adverse effects from the use of hydrogen peroxide.

IDGender and ageDate and timeRoute of administrationAdverse effectSeverity of adverse effect 1 Possible cause (causality)Security problem 2 CountermeasureConsequence of the event 3
01Male, 3805/12/20 20:00 (day 2)Inhalatory (nebulization)Momentary shortness of breathMildAccidental use of undiluted solution: using 10 drops undiluted for 3 minutesRelatedOnly observation. The discomfort was mild and resolved after 10 minutesRecovered without after-effects
05/14/20 19:01 (day 4)OralNauseaMildDuring the third meal of the day, he felt nauseous when ingesting the treatment quickly and continuouslyRelatedOnly observation. The effect was momentary and disappeared after five minutesRecovered without after-effects
02Male, 4005/16/20 18:00 (day 6)Inhalatory (nebulization)Chest tightnessMildHe had eaten in a hurry, just before doing the nebulization, so indigestion is suspectedNot relatedOmeprazole 20 mg, a single dose. The effect disappeared after around 20 minutesRecovered without after-effects
04Male, 3505/22/20 16:00 (day 3)OralNausea and refluxMildGastroesophageal reflux disease (chronic) with poor adherence to treatmentNot relatedEsomeprazole 40 mg single dose per day, irritant-free diet, and avoiding prolonged fasts. Abandoning oral treatment of his own accord (day 5)Recovered without after-effects
05/24/20 19:00 (day 5)Inhalatory (nebulization)Palpitations (heartbeat)MildPossible mild intolerance due to gastroesophageal refluxNot relatedOnly observation. The effect was momentary and disappeared five minutes laterRecovered without after-effects
05Male, 1906/07/20 16:50 (day 1)Inhalatory (nebulization)HeadacheMildHe had headache, asthenia, adynamia, chills, and diaphoresis before starting treatmentNot relatedAcetaminophen 500 mg, a single dose. Headache disappeared 1 hour laterRecovered without after-effects
06Female, 2106/07/20 23:00 (day 1)Inhalatory (nebulization)Mild headache and eye irritationMildWhen nebulizing, the steam escaped through the upper holes of the mask, causing the peroxide contact with the eyesRelatedNebulization was stopped immediately, and mask openings were canceledRecovered without after-effects
06/07/20 23:00 (day 1)OralNauseaMildDrug gastritis (taking 6 drugs without gastric protection)Not relatedDelivery of medications was organized throughout the day, and omeprazole 40 mg was added in a single dose upon wakingRecovered without after-effects
09Male, 4006/15/21 18:00 (day 1)OralOdynophagiaMildPresence of prior ulcers in pharynx from upper respiratory infectionNot relatedSublingual ketorolac 30 mg, single dose 20 minutes before peroxideRecovered without after-effects
24Male, 2307/02/21 19:00 (day 2)OralSicknessMildDrug gastritis (taking 6 drugs without gastric protection)Not relatedThe dosage of drugs is organized throughout the day and omeprazole 20 mg every 12 hoursRecovered without after-effects
07/02/21 20:00 (day 2)Inhalatory (nebulization)Nasal irritationMildUse of salbutamol and fluticasone (nebulized) 10 minutes before use of peroxideNot relatedUse of salbutamol and fluticasone 1 hour before nebulization with peroxideRecovered without after-effects
32Male, 3007/09/21 20:00 (day 6)OralDizziness and bitter tasteMildPeroxide intolerance is suspected because adverse effect appears almost immediatelyRelatedReduction of frequency of peroxide to two doses per dayRecovered without after-effects

1 In accordance with “NORMA Official Mexicana NOM-220-SSA1-2016” (about installation and operation of pharmacovigilance); 2 in accordance with “Guía de Farmacovigilancia en Investigación Clínica” (COFEPRIS, 2020); 3 in accordance with “Instructivo de llenado del formato Aviso de Sospechas de Reacciones Adversas de Medicamentos” (COFEPRIS, 2017).

Of the 28 caregivers who received instructions for prophylactic mouth rinsing and gargles with H2O2, none reported acquiring the disease at the closing of the study or after the 30-day follow-up period. Three caregivers (11%) reported minor safety issues with the handling of the H2O2 concentrated solution. On two occasions, small amounts of the solution were spilled during preparation and reached the skin surface of hands or fingers of the person preparing the dilution. This caused immediate burning sensation and whitening of skin surface which lasted between 20 minutes and 30 minutes. Treatment was indicated as washing hands and rinsing in cold water. In one case, an undiluted drop of H2O2 accidentally remained on edge of the glass used for gargling. A canker sore in the person's gum occurred as undiluted H2O2 touched the oral mucosa. All these cases resolved favorably, without complications or after-effects.

Figure 1 illustrates the start of H2O2 therapy (forward arrow) and the day of first improvement (triangle). In ten patients, “first improvement” was reported on the first day of treatment with hydrogen peroxide. In many of these cases, the improvements were noted since the first applications of the hydrogen peroxide. On average, the duration of disease starting from the application of hydrogen peroxide to recovery was of 8 days. The minimum days for complete recovery were 4 and the maximum were 14. All patients except number 17 had a complete recovery. Two patients were hospitalized and discharged prior to inclusion in the study.

4. Discussion

“When the river sounds, it means it's carrying water” [19]. We have described the use of three concomitant treatment modalities with hydrogen peroxide (mouth rinse and gargles, oral, and respiratory) which have proven to be safe and well tolerated among a group of 23 consecutive COVID-19 patients. Complementary and alternative medical treatments such as this, using hydrogen peroxide, may have played a significant role in the rapidly improving clinical characteristics and health outcomes observed among our consecutive twenty-three COVID-19 patients, and thus, it deserves further investigation. The age of the patients at a mean of 39 was relatively young compared to those who experience severe COVID-19, and without a control, it cannot be concluded that the treatment contributed to reducing the duration or severity, considering the natural history of disease [20, 21].

Overall, most patients had a disease that lasted between 15 and 30 days, and only three patients had a disease that lasted more than 31 days. The shortest duration was 11 days in patient #9. In four patients, the duration was 14 days or less. Patient #12 came to us after being in the hospital for 5 days and was admitted considering his first day when he received the positive result of the RT-PCR result; the duration of his disease was 53 days. The start of his disease was much longer than is reflected in Figure 1 .

For over four decades now, proponents of oral therapies with hydrogen peroxide have existed in the CAM and integrative medicine circles. They have argued in favor of the therapeutic effects of this molecule for multiple human ailments, ranging from cancer to diabetes, and spanning diseases of the cardiovascular, respiratory, gastrointestinal, and immune bodily systems [5, 6, 22–26].

Yoon et al. have shown that the SARS-CoV-2 viral load is consistently high in the saliva, higher than that in the oropharynx during the early stage of COVID-19 [27]. Their finding suggests that SARS-CoV-2 might be secreted from the salivary glands. Therefore, mouth rinsing with an antiseptic agent could be effective in reducing the SARS-CoV-2 viral load in the saliva and controlling droplet transmission for a short-term period. The hypothesis that oral gargle agents and nasal lavages with hydrogen peroxide dilutions could reduce the oral and the nasopharyngeal viral load and could help improve the immune response to COVID-19 and its symptoms seems to be well founded and is supported by our observations in this case series report [14, 15].

Our enteral supplementation of hydrogen peroxide at 0.06% was based on the twofold assumption that (1) the SARS-CoV-2 attacks the gastrointestinal system of many patients and (2) the gastrointestinal system may become a modulator for circulating oxygen in the body. It is known that the gastrointestinal tract is about 40% more efficient at assimilating oxygen than the lungs; thus, the oral administration of hydrogen peroxide is a very effective way of getting therapeutic oxygen into the body [25].

In the oral administration, a frequent complaint was that it caused nausea, sometimes dizziness, and vomiting and was not easily tolerated. Incremental dosing was instructed; with gradual increments, tolerance and acceptance of enteral administration were achieved.

Successful nebulization with oxidizing solutions for the symptomatic treatment of airway infections has also been recently reported for COVID-19 cases [23]. Most of our patients reported immediate relief of respiratory symptoms and documented improved oxygenation as measured by their pulse oximeter with the nebulization. In addition to the reduction in the duration (compared to clinical progress and outcomes for Mexican patients), we observed a possible reduction in the severity of the disease and a perceived reduction in symptoms by most patients.

Seven out of the twenty-three patients were responsible for their own care. Of the other sixteen patients, a total of twenty-eight caregivers or people in close contact with the COVID-19 patients (living within the same household) self-administered prophylactic hydrogen peroxide mouth rinse and gargle recommendations, as described within the methodology. At follow-up, one month after the disease had receded, none of the caregivers who used prophylactic mouth rinsing and gargles reported acquiring the disease.

Because we gave the patients/caregivers a 35% solution of H2O2 to dilute themselves, there was a risk of severe harms by accidental spillage or inhalation of the concentrated solution or by accidental misdilution. These safety issues were emphasized with patients and caregivers, and specific instructions were added to keep away from children. Ideally, only prediluted solutions should be dispensed to patients to avoid possible harm from misuse of a highly oxidizing corrosive solution.

The systematic review of Ortega et al. [12] to detect studies that document the virucidal effect of hydrogen peroxide concludes that there is no evidence specifically for its use through mouthwashes, which is understandable, since documenting the virucidal effect of rinses had not been the great interest of the scientific community, as Ortega himself makes clear. There is no study in the literature demonstrating the efficacy of H2O2 as a virucidal agent for surface disinfection either. During their review, they found only one in vivo study that evaluated the efficacy of a product (Listerine) in reducing HSV-1 in the saliva of patients with active lip lesions [28]. The lack of a standardized method to demonstrate how to verify the virucidal effect in nonstandardized samples from the nasopharyngeal and oral cavity becomes a challenge to develop clinical research studies aimed at generating evidence of the virucidal effect of any mouthwash.

This can be confirmed in the systematic review carried out by Cavalcante-Leão et al., aimed at detecting evidence on the effectiveness of mouthwashes in reducing viral load in COVID-19. They recommend further research (mainly randomized clinical trials), given the scant evidence found [29]. On the other hand, efforts such as that of Gottsauner and collaborators [30], to question the effect of hydrogen peroxide at 1% on intraoral viral load in 10 subjects positive for SARS-CoV-2, are valuable to warn the scientific community about the importance of not advancing clinical measures and recommendations for the application of hydrogen peroxide without the support of scientific studies that present conclusive data.

Currently, the clinical trials database of the National Library of Medicine contains 15 registered trials about the use of hydrogen peroxide as a prophylactic mouthwash, in concentrations ranging from 1 to 3%. This fact highlights the interest of the global scientific community in the use of this substance to combat the SARS-CoV-2. However, there are no registered trials for use of H2O2 with oral or nebulized applications.

Amidst the staggering toll of the pandemic, there has been scarce scientific interest in complementary and alternative medical treatment modalities against COVID-19, such as this one using H2O2, which we believe merits further scientific scrutiny. Given the possible therapeutic and prophylactic value that has been observed in this small number of patients, caregivers, and close contacts, we believe that the molecule merits further scientific scrutiny. We considered that hydrogen peroxide could be easily distributed at mass scale, could help slow the transmission among healthcare professionals and vulnerable populations, and could even act as a prophylactic agent.

This is the reason why we release this case series report, with the hope of raising interesting questions in the medical field and stimulating discussion as well as much needed clinical research on the subject.

5. Limitations

The results obtained are only observational and not generalizable to the entire population and therefore do not prove causation. Another limitation is selection bias, given that patients were not selected randomly and were accepted consecutively as they approached us and fulfilled our inclusion criteria. Another limitation is that the pharmacological treatment of all patients in the case series was not standardized, and during the study implementation primary care physicians prescribed medication such as hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin, now known to have no medical improvement in the disease. This makes it difficult to fully attribute hydrogen peroxide's capacity to improve the disease. We also did not provide case controls. Given the public health emergency, patients were accepted rapidly and had diverse comorbidities and concomitant medical treatments that could interfere with the treatment and influence the health outcomes.

Thus, further study is needed with a standardized protocol of medical treatment (unavailable now) given the novelty of the disease we are assessing and the lack of resources for implementing a double-blind randomized clinical trial.

As with any report aiming to expose the benefits of telemedicine, a limitation to this method of care that must be addressed is the difficulty in gauging whether the caregivers or patients are correctly administrating the therapies prescribed or being rigorous in the vital sign recording, our primary measurement for improvement. It is most definitely a trust exercise, but one that is worth the risk based on our findings.

A minor, yet worth addressing, limitation is that, due to the ambulatory care given to our patients, paraclinical studies were not readily available, and only the patients with more economic capacity were able to acquire paraclinical posttreatment. This is primarily the reason why our most reliable improvement metrics were signs and symptomatology.

In the official guidelines for the treatment and management of COVID-19 ambulatory patients, published in February 2020 and updated in July 2020 by the Mexican Ministry of Health, the indication for treatment for COVID-19 patients is merely symptomatic [31]. This means that patients are sent home with acetaminophen as the only treatment. There are no pharmacological alternatives presented as substitutes for Mexican practicing physicians, rendering the management of the disease a complicated challenge for many. Complementary and alternative medicine has a lot to offer to fill this inhumane void.

6. Conclusions

Hydrogen peroxide is a widely used, highly accessible, and available chemical compound whose efficacy has been demonstrated on several human viruses, including coronavirus and influenza viruses [32]. It is possible that hydrogen peroxide, by diverse routes of administration and mechanisms of action, could exhibit a therapeutic and/or prophylactic effect against SARS-CoV-2.

The concentrations of H2O2 that we used for mouth rinses, for enteral administration, and for nebulized application are safe, as no serious side effects were reported in either of the three modalities of administration.

Research is needed to determine the full potential of complementary and alternative therapies such as those with hydrogen peroxide, for use in prophylaxis and treatment against COVID-19.

We strongly encourage the rapid development of randomized controlled trials to study the benefits of oral (enteral), mouth and nasal rinse, and vaporized applications of hydrogen peroxide against SARS-CoV-2, in singular use or therapeutic combinations.

Although further clinical studies are required to evaluate the safety and efficacy of antiseptic mouthwashes against SARS-CoV-2, the prophylactic application represents a promise for widespread uses among the general population, especially the vulnerable and highly exposed groups.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to thank the families and caregivers of the patients; Deyahnira Zamora Ponce, call-center operator; Ali Castañeda Alcántara, responsible for logistics; and Claudia M. del Angel who participated as clinical monitor. The authors also wish to thank Doctor Damian Carrillo, Dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences at Anahuac University, and Doctor José Juan Antonio Ibarra Arias, Head of the Center for Research in Health Sciences, at the Faculty of Health Sciences of Anahuac University Mexico, for their comments on the manuscript and their valuable support during the process of service and investigation.

Data Availability

Data are not available for patient privacy and confidentiality motives.

Ethical Approval

According to the Declaration of Helsinki, which literally states: Article 37 “When in the patient care the proven interventions there are no other known interventions, they have been ineffective, The doctor, after requesting expert advice, with the informed consent of the patient or of an authorized legal representative, can afford to use unproven interventions, if in their judgment, they give some hope of saving life, restoring health, or alleviating suffering. Such interventions should be further investigated to assess their safety and efficacy. In all cases, this new information must be recorded and, when appropriate, made available to the public.” This research is based on the principles of personalistic Bioethics, given that the human person with their intrinsic dignity is considered as a core value. This was demonstrated by caring for the wellbeing of patients regardless of age, comorbidity, severity, or prognosis, seeking their improvement comprehensively. We have complied with benefitting the common good by offering curative or prophylactic treatment to patients, health personnel, caregivers, and relatives hoping to avoid contagion or decrease the severity of the disease. This study complies with the universal principles in ethics during research in human beings and the Declaration of Helsinki. By not having an effective treatment for COVID-19 and given the morbidity and mortality of the disease, the exploration of a known solution with low-risk toxicity is made using an innovative application, not previously described in the medical literature. Throughout the trial, the personal liberty of patients was respected.

Consent

After explaining simply and clearly what this protocol consisted of, the patients gave their consent, being aware that they could leave the trial if and whenever they so wished. The patients described in the case series are anonymous and not identifiable from the details presented. There is no patient identifiable data included in the case series.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.

References

1. Love I. N. Peroxide of hydrogen as a remedial agent: read before the St. Louis Medical Society, february 4, 1888. Journal of the American Medical Association. 1888; 10 (9):262–265. doi: 10.1001/jama.1888.02400350010002a. [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

2. Oliver T. H., Murphy D. V. Influenzal pneumonia: the intravenous injection of hydrogen peroxide. The Lancet. 1920; 195 (5034):432–433. doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(01)11118-9. [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

3. Atwood K., Charles H. Farr and the purported scientific and medical rationale for intravenous hydrogen peroxide. Scientific Review of Alternative Medicine. 2007; 11 (1):11–17. [Google Scholar]

4. Halliwell B., Clement M. V., Long L. H. Hydrogen peroxide in the human body. FEBS Letters. 2000; 486 (1):10–13. doi: 10.1016/s0014-5793(00)02197-9. [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

5. Farr C. H. The Therapeutic Use of Intravenous Hydrogen Peroxide. Oklahoma City, OK, USA: Genesis Medical Center; 1986. [Google Scholar]

6. Farr C. H. Workbook on Free Radical Chemistry and Hydrogen Peroxide Metabolism. Including Protocol for the Intravenous Administration of Hydrogen Peroxide. Oklahoma City, OK, USA: IBOM Foundation; 1996. [Google Scholar]

7. Vergara-Buenaventura A., Castro-Ruiz C. Use of mouthwashes against COVID-19 in dentistry. British Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. 2020; 58 (8):924–927. doi: 10.1016/j.bjoms.2020.08.016. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

8. Marshall M. V., Cancro L. P., Fischman S. L. Hydrogen peroxide: a review of its use in dentistry. Journal of Periodontology. 1995; 66 (9):786–796. doi: 10.1902/jop.1995.66.9.786. [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

9. Brownstein D., Richard N. G., Rowen R., et al. A novel approach to treating COVID-19 using nutritional and oxidative therapies. Science, Public Health Policy, and The Law. 2020; 2 :4–22. [Google Scholar]

11. Goyal S. M., Chander Y., Yezli S., Otter J. A. Evaluating the virucidal efficacy of hydrogen peroxide vapour. Journal of Hospital Infection. 2014; 86 (4):255–259. doi: 10.1016/j.jhin.2014.02.003. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

12. Ortega K. L., Rech B. D. O., Ferreira Costa A. L., Pérez Sayans M., Braz-Silva P. H. Is 0.5% hydrogen peroxide effective against SARS- CoV-2? Oral Diseases. 2020:p. 13503. doi: 10.1111/odi.13503. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

13. Kampf G., Todt D., Pfaender S., Steinmann E. Persistence of coronaviruses on inanimate surfaces and their inactivation with biocidal agents. Journal of Hospital Infection. 202; 104 (3):246–251. doi: 10.1016/j.jhin.2020.01.022. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

14. Caruso A. A., Del Prete A., Lazzarino A. I., Capaldi R., Grumetto L. Might hydrogen peroxide reduce the hospitalization rate and complications of SARS-CoV-2 infection? Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology. 2020; 41 (11):1360–1361. doi: 10.1017/ice.2020.170. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

15. Caruso A. A., Del Prete A., Lazzarino A. I. Hydrogen peroxide and viral infections: a literature review with research hypothesis definition in relation to the current covid-19 pandemic. Medical Hypotheses. 2020; 144 :p. 109910. doi: 10.1016/j.mehy.2020.109910. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

16. Gansky S. A. UCSF COVID-19 trial: effect of antiseptic mouthwash/gargling solutions and pre-procedural Rinse on SARS-CoV-2 Load (COVID-19) 2020. https://clinicaltrials.ucsf.edu/trial/NCT04409873.

17. Khan F. R., Kazmi S. M. R., Iqbal N. T., Iqbal J., Ali S. T., Abbas S. A. A quadruple blind, randomised controlled trial of gargling agents in reducing intraoral viral load among hospitalised COVID-19 patients: a structured summary of a study protocol for a randomised controlled trial. Trials. 2020; 21 (1):p. 758. doi: 10.1186/s13063-020-04634-2. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

18. Fowler Z., Moeller E., Roa L., et al. Projected impact of COVID-19 mitigation strategies on hospital services in the Mexico City Metropolitan area. PLoS One. 2020; 15 (11) doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0241954. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

19. Translation of Popular Mexican Saying; “Cuando El Río Suena, es que agua lleva,” (Refrán popular mexicano)

20. Hu B., Guo H., Zhou P., Shi Z.-L. Characteristics of SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19. Nature Reviews Microbiology. 2021; 19 (3):141–154. doi: 10.1038/s41579-020-00459-7. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

21. Matheson N. J., Lehner P. J. How does SARS-CoV-2 cause COVID-19? Science. 2020; 369 (6503):510–511. doi: 10.1126/science.abc6156. [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

22. Cavanaugh M. The One-Minute Cure: The Secret to Healing Virtually All Diseases. 1st. Lafayette, CA, USA: Think Outside the Box Publishing, Inc.; 2008. [Google Scholar]

23. González D. R. C. R., López D. E. T. Super-oxidized solution nebulization for the symptomatic treatment of airway infections including COVID-19 cases report. International Journal of Innovative Research in Medical Science. 2020; 5 (8):339–348. doi: 10.23958/ijirms/vol05-i08/922. [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

24. Douglass W. C. Hydrogen Peroxide-Medical Miracle. Philadelphia, PA, USA: BookBaby; 2003. [Google Scholar]

26. Williams D. G., “Hydrogen Peroxide Protocol,” p. 3.

27. Yoon J. G., Yoon J., Song J. Y., et al. Clinical significance of a high SARS-CoV-2 viral load in the saliva. Journal of Korean Medical Science. 2020; 35 (20) doi: 10.3346/jkms.2020.35.e195. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

28. Meiller T. F., Silva A., Ferreira S. M., Jabra-Rizk M. A., Kelley J. I., DePaola L. G. Efficacy of Listerine® antiseptic in reducing viral contamination of saliva. Journal of Clinical Periodontology. 2005; 32 (4):341–346. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-051x.2005.00673.x. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

29. Cavalcante-Leão B., de Araujo C., Basso I., et al. Is there scientific evidence of the mouthwashes effectiveness in reducing viral load in Covid-19? A systematic review. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Dentistry. 2021; 13 (2):e179–e189. doi: 10.4317/jced.57406. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

30. Gottsauner M. J., Michaelides I., Schmidt B., et al. A prospective clinical pilot study on the effects of a hydrogen peroxide mouthrinse on the intraoral viral load of SARS-CoV-2. Clinical Oral Investigations. 2020; 24 (10):3707–3713. doi: 10.1007/s00784-020-03549-1. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

31. Pasten J. C. M. Lineamiento para la atención de pacientes por COVID-19: CVOED-centro virtual de operaciones en emergencias y desastres. 2020. http://cvoed.imss.gob.mx/lineamiento-para-la-atencion-de-pacientes-por-covid-19/

32. William Z., Mauroy A., Farnir F., Thiry E. Virucidal efficacy of a hydrogen peroxide nebulization against murine norovirus and feline calicivirus, two surrogates of human norovirus. Food and Environmental Virology. 2016; 8 (4):275–282. doi: 10.1007/s12560-016-9253-5. [PubMed] [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]

Articles from Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine : eCAM are provided here courtesy of Wiley