Long-term (180-Day) Outcomes in Critically Ill Patients With COVID-19 in the REMAP-CAP Randomized Clinical Trial.

Clicks: 45
ID: 278388
2023
Article Quality & Performance Metrics
Overall Quality Improving Quality
0.0 /100
Combines engagement data with AI-assessed academic quality
AI Quality Assessment
Not analyzed
Abstract
The longer-term effects of therapies for the treatment of critically ill patients with COVID-19 are unknown.To determine the effect of multiple interventions for critically ill adults with COVID-19 on longer-term outcomes.Prespecified secondary analysis of an ongoing adaptive platform trial (REMAP-CAP) testing interventions within multiple therapeutic domains in which 4869 critically ill adult patients with COVID-19 were enrolled between March 9, 2020, and June 22, 2021, from 197 sites in 14 countries. The final 180-day follow-up was completed on March 2, 2022.Patients were randomized to receive 1 or more interventions within 6 treatment domains: immune modulators (n = 2274), convalescent plasma (n = 2011), antiplatelet therapy (n = 1557), anticoagulation (n = 1033), antivirals (n = 726), and corticosteroids (n = 401).The main outcome was survival through day 180, analyzed using a bayesian piecewise exponential model. A hazard ratio (HR) less than 1 represented improved survival (superiority), while an HR greater than 1 represented worsened survival (harm); futility was represented by a relative improvement less than 20% in outcome, shown by an HR greater than 0.83.Among 4869 randomized patients (mean age, 59.3 years; 1537 [32.1%] women), 4107 (84.3%) had known vital status and 2590 (63.1%) were alive at day 180. IL-6 receptor antagonists had a greater than 99.9% probability of improving 6-month survival (adjusted HR, 0.74 [95% credible interval {CrI}, 0.61-0.90]) and antiplatelet agents had a 95% probability of improving 6-month survival (adjusted HR, 0.85 [95% CrI, 0.71-1.03]) compared with the control, while the probability of trial-defined statistical futility (HR >0.83) was high for therapeutic anticoagulation (99.9%; HR, 1.13 [95% CrI, 0.93-1.42]), convalescent plasma (99.2%; HR, 0.99 [95% CrI, 0.86-1.14]), and lopinavir-ritonavir (96.6%; HR, 1.06 [95% CrI, 0.82-1.38]) and the probabilities of harm from hydroxychloroquine (96.9%; HR, 1.51 [95% CrI, 0.98-2.29]) and the combination of lopinavir-ritonavir and hydroxychloroquine (96.8%; HR, 1.61 [95% CrI, 0.97-2.67]) were high. The corticosteroid domain was stopped early prior to reaching a predefined statistical trigger; there was a 57.1% to 61.6% probability of improving 6-month survival across varying hydrocortisone dosing strategies.Among critically ill patients with COVID-19 randomized to receive 1 or more therapeutic interventions, treatment with an IL-6 receptor antagonist had a greater than 99.9% probability of improved 180-day mortality compared with patients randomized to the control, and treatment with an antiplatelet had a 95.0% probability of improved 180-day mortality compared with patients randomized to the control. Overall, when considered with previously reported short-term results, the findings indicate that initial in-hospital treatment effects were consistent for most therapies through 6 months.
Reference Key
nolastname2023longtermjama Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors , ;Higgins, Alisa M;Berry, Lindsay R;Lorenzi, Elizabeth;Murthy, Srinivas;McQuilten, Zoe;Mouncey, Paul R;Al-Beidh, Farah;Annane, Djillali;Arabi, Yaseen M;Beane, Abi;van Bentum-Puijk, Wilma;Bhimani, Zahra;Bonten, Marc J M;Bradbury, Charlotte A;Brunkhorst, Frank M;Burrell, Aidan;Buzgau, Adrian;Buxton, Meredith;Charles, Walton N;Cove, Matthew;Detry, Michelle A;Estcourt, Lise J;Fagbodun, Elizabeth O;Fitzgerald, Mark;Girard, Timothy D;Goligher, Ewan C;Goossens, Herman;Haniffa, Rashan;Hills, Thomas;Horvat, Christopher M;Huang, David T;Ichihara, Nao;Lamontagne, Francois;Marshall, John C;McAuley, Daniel F;McGlothlin, Anna;McGuinness, Shay P;McVerry, Bryan J;Neal, Matthew D;Nichol, Alistair D;Parke, Rachael L;Parker, Jane C;Parry-Billings, Karen;Peters, Sam E C;Reyes, Luis F;Rowan, Kathryn M;Saito, Hiroki;Santos, Marlene S;Saunders, Christina T;Serpa-Neto, Ary;Seymour, Christopher W;Shankar-Hari, Manu;Stronach, Lucy M;Turgeon, Alexis F;Turner, Anne M;van de Veerdonk, Frank L;Zarychanski, Ryan;Green, Cameron;Lewis, Roger J;Angus, Derek C;McArthur, Colin J;Berry, Scott;Derde, Lennie P G;Gordon, Anthony C;Webb, Steve A;Lawler, Patrick R;
Journal JAMA
Year 2023
DOI 10.1001/jama.2022.23257
URL
Keywords

Citations

No citations found. To add a citation, contact the admin at info@scimatic.org

No comments yet. Be the first to comment on this article.