9638名重症COVID-19住院患者的研究性药物:2020年前两波大流行期间“失败-学习”策略的教训。

IF 2.6 Q1 SURGERY
Adam C Delgado, Brendon Cornett, Ye Ji Choi, Christina Colosimo, Vincent P Stahel, Oliwier Dziadkowiec, Philip F Stahel
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:2019年新型冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行的早期激增带来了重大的临床挑战,因为在缺乏循证建议的情况下,病死率很高。经验性治疗模式从传统的急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)管理中降级为历史专业知识,与监管机构在“紧急使用授权”(EUA)范式下认可的超说明书药物制剂一起使用。本研究旨在评估2020年COVID-19疫苗可用之前“失败-学习”战略的见解,并从高质量随机对照试验中获得可靠的见解。方法:采用回顾性、多中心、倾向匹配、病例对照研究,对来自美国国家卫生保健系统的186家医院的数据注册表进行研究,旨在调查经验治疗模式在2020年COVID-19大流行早期激增期间的疗效。根据2020年大流行最初两次高潮的时间窗口,将患者分为“2020年初”(3月1日至6月30日)和“2020年底”(7月1日至12月31日)研究队列。应用Logistic回归来确定流行药物(瑞德西韦、阿奇霉素、羟氯喹、皮质类固醇、托珠单抗)和补充供氧方式(有创与无创通气)对患者预后的影响。主要结局指标为住院死亡率。组间比较调整了与年龄、性别、种族、体重、合并症和与器官衰竭置换术相关的治疗方式相关的协变量。结果:在本研究筛选的多中心数据注册中心中,共有87788名患者纳入了9638名患者,他们在2020年大流行的前两波期间接受了19763种COVID-19药物治疗。结果显示,羟氯喹在“2020年初”和瑞德西韦在“2020年末”与死亡率的比值降低(比值比分别为0.72和0.76;p = 0.01)。在两个研究时间窗内,阿奇霉素是唯一与死亡率降低相关的药物(比值比分别为0.79和0.68;结论:这项针对9638名重症COVID-19住院患者的回顾性多中心观察队列研究显示,有创通气的必要性具有最高的死亡率,超出了在美国2020年初大流行的前两次高潮期间使用eua批准的流行研究药物所观察到的可变影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Investigational medications in 9,638 hospitalized patients with severe COVID-19: lessons from the "fail-and-learn" strategy during the first two waves of the pandemic in 2020.

Investigational medications in 9,638 hospitalized patients with severe COVID-19: lessons from the "fail-and-learn" strategy during the first two waves of the pandemic in 2020.

Investigational medications in 9,638 hospitalized patients with severe COVID-19: lessons from the "fail-and-learn" strategy during the first two waves of the pandemic in 2020.

Investigational medications in 9,638 hospitalized patients with severe COVID-19: lessons from the "fail-and-learn" strategy during the first two waves of the pandemic in 2020.

Background: The early surge of the novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic introduced a significant clinical challenge due to the high case-fatality rate in absence of evidence-based recommendations. The empirical treatment modalities were relegated to historical expertise from the traditional management of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in conjunction with off-label pharmaceutical agents endorsed under the "emergency use authorization" (EUA) paradigm by regulatory agencies. This study was designed to evaluate the insights from the "fail-and-learn" strategy in 2020 before the availability of COVID-19 vaccines and access to reliable insights from high-quality randomized controlled trials.

Methods: A retrospective, multicenter, propensity-matched, case-control study was performed on a data registry comprising 186 hospitals from a national health care system in the United States, designed to investigate the efficacy of empirical treatment modalities during the early surge of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Reflective of the time-windows of the initial two surges of the pandemic in 2020, patients were stratified into "Early 2020" (March 1-June 30) versus "Late 2020" (July 1-December 31) study cohorts. Logistic regression was applied to determine the efficacy of prevalent medications (remdesivir, azithromycin, hydroxychloroquine, corticosteroids, tocilizumab) and supplemental oxygen delivery modalities (invasive vs. non-invasive ventilation) on patient outcomes. The primary outcome measure was in-hospital mortality. Group comparisons were adjusted for covariates related to age, gender, ethnicity, body weight, comorbidities, and treatment modalities pertinent to organ failure replacement.

Results: From a total of 87,788 patients in the multicenter data registry screened in this study, 9,638 patients were included who received 19,763 COVID-19 medications during the first two waves of the 2020 pandemic. The results showed a minimal, yet statistically significant, association with hydroxychloroquine in "Early 2020" and remdesivir in "Late 2020" with reduced odds of mortality (odds ratios 0.72 and 0.76, respectively; P = 0.01). Azithromycin was the only medication associated with decreased odds of mortality during both study time-windows (odds ratios 0.79 and 0.68, respectively; P < 0.01). In contrast, the necessity for oxygen supply showed significantly increased odds of mortality beyond the effect of all investigated medications. Of all the covariates associated with increased mortality, invasive mechanical ventilation had the highest odds ratios of 8.34 in the first surge and 9.46 in in the second surge of the pandemic (P < 0.01).

Conclusion: This retrospective multicenter observational cohort study on 9,638 hospitalized patients with severe COVID-19 during revealed that the necessity for invasive ventilation had the highest odds of mortality, beyond the variable effects observed by administration of the prevalent EUA-approved investigational drugs during the first two surges of the early 2020 pandemic in the United States.

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CiteScore
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自引率
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