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Sunday, November 8, 2020

Early, low-dose, short-term methylprednisolone decreased mortality in critical COVID-19

Published:November 08, 2020DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinf.2020.11.001

Dear Editor,
We read with interest the recent paper by Yang et al, concluding that corticosteroids overall have a negative impact on COVID-19 outcomes from a meta-analysis . Critical COVID-19, characterized by refractory hypoxemia caused by acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), is a life-threatening multi-organ dysfunction syndrome resulted from host response to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Glucocorticoid (GC) was one of the anti-inflammatory medications used in critical patients . Efficacy of glucocorticoids has been reported in numerous clinical studies in the treatment of coronavirus pneumonia . Yang and colleagues demonstrated that patients treated with GC had a higher mortality , suggesting that not all patients could benefit from GC treatment. Present study aimed to evaluate the effect of GC on different patient population. Since critical patients were more likely to receive GC therapy, only severe type and critical type patients, according to clinical classification of the Chinese Recommendations for Diagnosis and Treatment of Novel Coronavirus (SARSCoV2) infection (Trial 7th version), were enrolled in present study. We retrospective collected the clinical and outcome data of critical COVID-19 patients, and taking methylprednisolone (MP) treatment, the most used GC during clinical treatment, as an exposure factor analyzed the outcome. This study provides information on MP clinical application in treatment of SARS-CoV-2 infection, including patient selection and administration time and dosage.
Present multicenter retrospective cohort study was performed in 4 government designated treatment centers for COVID-19 patients in 3 cities in China, Wuhan, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen. The data collection period was from December 2019 to March 2020. This study was approved by the Research Ethics Commission of General Hospital of Southern Theater Command of PLA (HE-2020-08) and the requirement for informed consent was waived by the Ethics Commission. Inclusion Criteria for all patients: (1) Adult aged >=18 years old; (2) Laboratory (RT-PCR) confirmed SARS-COV-2 infection in throat swab and/or sputum and/or lower respiratory tract samples; or conformed plasma positive of specific antibody (IgM or/and IgG) against SARS-COV-2; (3) In-hospital treatment ≥72 hours. The patients in who meet any one of the following criteria were enrolled in severe type group 4: (a) Respiratory rate >= 30/min; or (b) Rest SPO2 <= 90 %; or (c) PaO2/FiO2 <= 300 mmHg. The patients in who meet any one of the following criteria were enrolled in critical type group 4: (a) Respiratory failure and needs mechanical ventilation; or (b) Shock occurs; or (c) Multiple organ failure and needs ICU monitoring. Exclusion Criteria: (1) Exist of other evidences that can explain pneumonia including but not limited to influenza A virus, influenza B virus, bacterial pneumonia, fungal pneumonia, noninfectious causes, etc.; (2) Women who are pregnant or breast-feeding.
Data from 338 patients diagnosed as critical COVID-19 were collected in present study. According to whether methylprednisolone was employed during treatment, 164 in Non-MP group and 174 in MP group. For all cases, MP treatment did not show benefit in prognosis (Figure 1). The effects of MP differed between different clinical classification and baseline lactate concentration. MP treatment on the critical type patients could decrease the 60-day fatality (HR: 0.409, 95 % CI: 0.238-0.704, P-value: 0.001), while it has no influence on the fatality of severe type patients. In addition, patients with higher lactate concentration on baseline could get more benefit from MP treatment. For the patients with lactic acid concentration over 2 mmol/L, MP treatment could significantly decrease the 60-day fatality (HR: 0.150, 95 % CI: 0.055-0.408, P-value: < 0.001). These results showed that MP treatment have more efficiency on the patients with serious condition. Glucocorticoid could suppress lung inflammation and but also inhibit immune responses. Therefore, balancing the risk and benefit is crucial during the treatment, that is, not all patients could benefit from GC therapy. Critical type COVID-19 patients showed excessive inflammatory responses and MP treatment could alleviate the cytokine storm by inhibiting the inflammatory cells activation . In addition, critical illness-related corticosteroid insufficiency occurs across a broad spectrum of critical illness due to the impairment of the hypothalamic pituitary axis . Inadequate endogenous glucocorticoid resulted in insufficient anti-inflammatory activity, and MP treatment could adverse this issue. Moreover, MP could improve the microcirculation in critical patients . That explained that our subgroup analysis results, which showed that MP treatment reduced the fatality of the patients with increased lactate.
https://www.journalofinfection.com/article/S0163-4453(20)30696-4/fulltext

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