Effect of thyme-ivy syrup on antiviral immune response in patients with mild COVID-19: a prospective, open-label, randomized pilot study
Stephanie Dauth, Stephan M. G. Schäfer, Maximilian Klippstein, Ann C. Foldenauer, Christin Jonetzko, Tanja Roßmanith, Susanne Schiffmann, Maria J. G. T. Vehreschild, Gerd Geisslinger, Frank Behrens, Michaela Koehm

TL;DR
This study explored whether thyme-ivy syrup affects immune responses in mild COVID-19 patients, finding some promising but preliminary results.
Contribution
The study is the first to investigate thyme-ivy syrup's impact on antiviral immune mediators in mild COVID-19 patients.
Findings
Thyme-ivy syrup showed larger decreases in IL-10 and IL-6 levels compared to the control group.
Significant between-group differences were observed for some immune parameters at day 4 and day 14.
Baseline characteristics were imbalanced, which may affect the interpretation of results.
Abstract
Thyme-ivy syrup has anti-inflammatory activities and exerts beneficial effects on symptom relief and recovery time in patients with acute bronchitis. The objective of this exploratory study was to evaluate the effect of thyme-ivy syrup on immune response mediators in patients with mild COVID-19. This prospective, open-label, randomized, controlled, single-center pilot study (BroVID study; EudraCT 2021–003237-11) was conducted in adult outpatients with mild COVID-19, cough, and ≥1 additional symptom. Patients were randomly assigned to the thyme-ivy syrup group, which received three 5.4 mL doses of oral thyme-ivy syrup per day for 14 days, or a control group (no medication) in a 2:1 ratio. The primary objective was to demonstrate a clinically relevant treatment difference between the two groups in change from baseline to day 7 in blood parameters involved in the immune response,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEssential Oils and Antimicrobial Activity · Medicinal Plants and Bioactive Compounds · Pharmacological Effects of Natural Compounds
