Leronlimab Evidence: Trial Results and Peer-Reviewed Publications
Hipa.ai Research · Source: PubMed & ClinicalTrials.gov / AACT · Last updated:
The clinical evidence base for Leronlimab comprises 5 peer-reviewed publications across 5 journals, 0 pivotal-trial primary-outcome rows reported to ClinicalTrials.gov, spanning indications including COVID-19, and Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease. Most recent publication: A Randomized Placebo-Controlled Trial of Leronlimab in Mild-To-Moderate COVID-19., Clin Ther, 2024.
Top peer-reviewed publications
Curated set of pivotal-trial result papers and recent publications in high-tier journals.
- A Randomized Placebo-Controlled Trial of Leronlimab in Mild-To-Moderate COVID-19.Seethamraju H, Yang OO, Loftus R, et al. · Clin Ther · 2024
- Reduced Cell Surface Levels of C-C Chemokine Receptor 5 and Immunosuppression in Long Coronavirus Disease 2019 Syndrome.Gaylis NB, Ritter A, Kelly SA, et al. · Clin Infect Dis · 2022
- CCR5 Receptor Occupancy Analysis Reveals Increased Peripheral Blood CCR5+CD4+ T Cells Following Treatment With the Anti-CCR5 Antibody Leronlimab.Chang XL, Wu HL, Webb GM, et al. · Front Immunol · 2022
- Using NEWS2: an essential component of reliable clinical assessment.Welch J, Dean J, Hartin J, et al. · Clin Med (Lond) · 2022
- Diagnostic performance of FibroTest, SteatoTest and ActiTest in patients with NAFLD using the SAF score as histological reference.Munteanu M, Tiniakos D, Anstee Q, et al. · Aliment Pharmacol Ther · 2017
Publications by year
2017–2024: 5 publications.
2017
1
2022
3
2024
1
Publications by indication
COVID-19 (4)
- A Randomized Placebo-Controlled Trial of Leronlimab in Mild-To-Moderate COVID-19.
- Reduced Cell Surface Levels of C-C Chemokine Receptor 5 and Immunosuppression in Long Coronavirus Disease 2019 Syndrome.
- CCR5 Receptor Occupancy Analysis Reveals Increased Peripheral Blood CCR5+CD4+ T Cells Following Treatment With the Anti-CCR5 Antibody Leronlimab.
- Using NEWS2: an essential component of reliable clinical assessment.
Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (1)
- Diagnostic performance of FibroTest, SteatoTest and ActiTest in patients with NAFLD using the SAF score as histological reference.
Publications by journal
- Clin Ther1 paper
- Clin Infect Dis1 paper
- Front Immunol1 paper
- Clin Med (Lond)1 paper
- Aliment Pharmacol Ther1 paper
All Leronlimab publications (5)
2024 (1 paper)
- A Randomized Placebo-Controlled Trial of Leronlimab in Mild-To-Moderate COVID-19.Seethamraju H, Yang OO, Loftus R, et al. · Clin Ther · 2024 · Derived
2022 (3 papers)
- Reduced Cell Surface Levels of C-C Chemokine Receptor 5 and Immunosuppression in Long Coronavirus Disease 2019 Syndrome.Gaylis NB, Ritter A, Kelly SA, et al. · Clin Infect Dis · 2022 · Derived
- CCR5 Receptor Occupancy Analysis Reveals Increased Peripheral Blood CCR5+CD4+ T Cells Following Treatment With the Anti-CCR5 Antibody Leronlimab.Chang XL, Wu HL, Webb GM, et al. · Front Immunol · 2022 · Derived
- Using NEWS2: an essential component of reliable clinical assessment.Welch J, Dean J, Hartin J, et al. · Clin Med (Lond) · 2022 · Background
2017 (1 paper)
- Diagnostic performance of FibroTest, SteatoTest and ActiTest in patients with NAFLD using the SAF score as histological reference.Munteanu M, Tiniakos D, Anstee Q, et al. · Aliment Pharmacol Ther · 2017 · Background
Sources and methodology
- Publications:
ctgov.study_references(PubMed PMIDs auto-attached by ClinicalTrials.gov to each trial), reference typesRESULT,DERIVED, andBACKGROUND. - Per-arm outcome values:
ctgov.outcome_measurementsjoined toctgov.design_outcomeswhereoutcome_type = 'PRIMARY', restricted to phasePHASE3andPHASE2/PHASE3. - Publication metadata (title, journal, year, authors): PubMed E-utilities
efetch.fcgi - Data freshness: Tue, 26 May 2026 18:07:38 GMT.
This page summarizes published evidence for general reference and does not constitute medical advice. For clinical decisions, consult the linked primary publications and your healthcare provider. Data sourced from PubMed and the ClinicalTrials.gov / AACT database maintained by the Clinical Trials Transformation Initiative (CTTI).