Common antidepressant may ease long COVID fatigue

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International researchers say the common antidepressant fluvoxamine reduces long COVID–19-related fatigue, one of the condition’s most persistent and debilitating symptoms, while the diabetes drug metformin provides no benefit. They assessed fluvoxamine and metformin for long COVID fatigue among 399 people who had been fatigued for at least 90 days after a COVID-19 infection. Participants were randomly assigned to receive fluvoxamine, metformin, or an inactive placebo. The researchers found that those on fluvoxamine reported a meaningful reduction in fatigue by day 60, with continued improvement at day 90, and also reported improvements in quality of life, while metformin didn't help at all. Fluvoxamine may be a viable treatment for long COVID fatigue, though longer-term effects remain unknown, the authors say. However, they note that participants' history of depression was not recorded or taken into account, so it's possible the improvements seen in fatigue and quality of life were the result of treating depression, rather than long COVID.

News release

From: American College of Physicians

Commonly prescribed antidepressant shows promise for easing long COVID fatigue in new clinical trial

A randomized clinical trial found that the antidepressant fluvoxamine significantly reduces long COVID–related fatigue, one of the condition’s most persistent and debilitating symptoms, while the diabetes drug metformin showed no benefit. Patients taking fluvoxamine reported steadily improving fatigue and quality-of-life scores over 60 to 90 days, with fewer side effects than those on placebo. The findings are published in Annals of Internal Medicine.

Researchers from the Brazilian Biomedical Research Institute and colleagues assessed the efficacy of fluvoxamine and metformin for long COVID fatigue among 399 people at 22 outpatient sites in Brazil between October 2023 and February 2025. Eligible participants had been experiencing fatigue for at least 90 days after infection and were assigned to fluvoxamine, metformin, or a placebo for 60 days. Researchers measured changes using a standard fatigue severity scale. Fluvoxamine produced a meaningful reduction in fatigue by day 60, with continued improvement at day 90, and also boosted overall quality-of-life scores. Metformin did not show any significant effect. While all treatments were generally safe, fluvoxamine had fewer reported adverse events. The authors conclude that fluvoxamine may offer a viable treatment option for long COVID fatigue, though longer-term effects remain unknown. However, an important limitation of the study was the absence of assessment for a history of depression. Thus, whether the treatment effect was due to a direct effect on long COVID or to an effect on baseline depression is uncertain.

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Annals of Internal Medicine
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Organisation/s: Brazilian Biomedical Research Institute, Brazil, University of British Columbia, Canada
Funder: The Latona Foundation.
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