免疫调节剂治疗COVID-19患者的医院感染:一项叙述性综述

Chidambaram Ramasamy, Gayatri Narayan, Ajay Kumar Mishra, Kevin John John, Amos Lal
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引用次数: 1

摘要

由于免疫反应失调与免疫调节治疗的复杂相互作用,医院感染对住院的冠状病毒病-19 (COVID-19)患者构成迫在眉睫的挑战。在大流行前的时代,免疫调节疗法已显示出对某些具有不可控炎症反应的自身免疫性疾病的益处。在COVID-19患者中总结这些免疫调节作用的努力得到了推动,随后是NIH COVID-19专家小组的建议。目前的NIH指南推荐白介素-6抑制剂(tocilizumab和sarilumab)和Janus激酶抑制剂(baricitinib和tofacitinib)。几项具有里程碑意义的研究试验,如COVAVTA、EMPACTA、REMDACTA、STOP-COVID和COV BARRIER,详细介绍了与免疫调节剂管理相关的各种效应。有历史证据表明,接受免疫调节剂治疗自身免疫性疾病的患者感染增加,这引起了人们对COVID-19患者免疫调节剂使用的担忧。这篇综述文章的目的是提供关于这个问题的现有文献的全面更新。我们回顾了40项研究,其中37项研究了IL-6抑制剂,3项研究了JAK抑制剂。在回顾的研究中,接受免疫调节剂治疗的COVID-19患者报告的医院感染率与接受COVID-19标准护理的患者相似。然而,这些研究并不能评估这些药物的副作用。免疫调节剂,通过抑制热原反应和炎症标记物可能延迟患者感染的检测。这强调了长期监测的重要性,这对于发现与这些药物有关的潜在风险是必要的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Nosocomial Infections in COVID-19 Patients Treated with Immunomodulators: A Narrative Review.

Nosocomial infections pose an imminent challenge to hospitalized Coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) patients due to complex interplay of dysregulated immune response combined with immunomodulator therapy. In the pre-pandemic era, immunomodulatory therapy has shown benefit in certain autoimmune conditions with untamed inflammatory response. Efforts to recapitulate these immunomodulatory effects in COVID-19 patients has gained impetus and were followed by NIH COVID-19 expert panel recommendations. The current NIH guideline recommends interleukin-6 inhibitors (tocilizumab and sarilumab) and Janus kinase inhibitors (baricitinib and tofacitinib). Several landmark research trials like COVAVTA, EMPACTA, REMDACTA, STOP-COVID and COV BARRIER have detailed the various effects associated with administration of immunomodulators. The historical evidence of increased infection among patients receiving immunomodulators for autoimmune conditions, raised concerns regarding administration of immunomodulators in COVID-19 patients. The aim of this review article is to provide a comprehensive update on the currently available literature surrounding this issue. We reviewed 40 studies out of which 37 investigated IL-6 inhibitors and 3 investigated JAK inhibitors. Among the studies reviewed, the reported rates of nosocomial infections among the COVID-19 patients treated with immunomodulators were similar to patients receiving standard of care for COVID-19. However, these studies were not powered to assess the side effect profile of these medications. Immunomodulators, by dampening the pyrogenic response and inflammatory markers may delay detection of infections among the patients. This underscores the importance of long-term surveillance which are necessary to discover the potential risks associated with these agents.

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