I have been avoiding regular weekly or monthly doses of rapamycin for fear that it could weaken my immune response, even though it's been found that intermittent dosing reduces that effect or eliminates it (see https://www.ncbi.nlm...les/PMC4906329/ and others).
Rapamycin (also called sirolimus) has also been theorized to be of value in the treatment of covid-19:
Previous studies have confirmed the mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) as the key factor in regulating various viruses’ replications, including Andes orthohantavirus and coronavirus48,49. Sirolimus (Z = –2.35 and GSEA score = 3), an inhibitor of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), was reported to effectively block viral protein expression and virion release effectively50. Indeed, the latest study revealed the clinical application: sirolimus reduced MERS-CoV infection by over 60%51. Moreover, sirolimus usage in managing patients with severe H1N1 pneumonia and acute respiratory failure can improve those patients’ prognosis significantly50.
https://www.nature.c...1421-020-0153-3
But this is for active cases where suppression of an overactive immune response could also be valuable.
I would like to start taking rapamycin again once a week or a larger dose once a month, but have not so far found any references that would help understand if doing this is more or less likely to predispose me to COVID-19 disease. Immune suppression is limited in intermittent dosing, but is there still a bit of it? Rapamycin may inhibit the infection once started, but is this effect likely to be bigger than the immune suppression, if there is some?
Does anyone have references that would inform the decision of whether to take or not take rapamycin during this pandemic (if not yet infected)?