Literature DB >> 32239459

Warning Against the Use of Anti-Inflammatory Medicines to Cure COVID-19: Building Castles in the Air.

Giustino Varrassi1.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Keywords:  Anti-inflammatory medicines; COVID-19; NSAIDs

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32239459      PMCID: PMC7110984          DOI: 10.1007/s12325-020-01321-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Ther        ISSN: 0741-238X            Impact factor:   3.845


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Key Summary Points

A recent article in Le Figaro has focused attention on the use of anti-inflammatory medicines because they could be responsible for an increased incidence of infections due to COVID-19 [1]. This article reports and emphasizes the opinion of politicians expressed via social media suggesting the use of one medicine instead of others, but not referencing opinions based on scientific data. A recent article focused its attention on the supposed relationship between chronic pathologies (hypertension and diabetes mellitus) and COVID-19 infection and their pharmacological treatment [2]. The initial assumption is based on two recent papers reporting the clinical experience in China, during the dramatic epidemic now becoming a pandemic [3, 4]. Both articles suggest that patients affected by COVID-19 frequently had concomitant chronic pathologies, especially hypertension and diabetes mellitus, pathologies that might be treated with angiotensin-converting-enzyme (ACE) inhibitors. Fang et al. [2] based their intriguing theory, of an increased risk of COVID-19 infection on patients treated with ACE inhibitors, on the relationship between the ACE system, which can be influenced by anti-inflammatory medicines, and the lung epithelial cells. Following this theory, their conclusion was the most obvious: “…patients …treated with ACE2-increasing drugs are at higher risk for severe COVID-19 infection…”. None of the quoted articles reporting the clinical experience in China has assessed the previous pharmacological therapy of the patients infected by COVID-19 [3, 4]. In the last part of this recent article, the authors suggest that, based on a search on PubMed made on February 28, 2020, there are no reports on the potential influence of calcium channel blockers on ACE2 activity [2]. Therefore, these drugs could be used as an “alternative treatment in these patients”. Actually, nobody knows what the pharmacological therapy of the Chinese patients was. Maybe some of them were already using calcium antagonists. Hence, it seems that Fang et al.’s [2] theory is not related to what is reported in the two Chinese papers. Recently (March 9, 2020), I carried out a very thorough literature search for all the published material on COVID-19. None of the articles found on PubMed reports data connecting the use of ACE-inhibitors or NSAIDs to an increased incidence or risk of COVID-19 infection. I am not excluding that it might be shown in the future, when the literature will have more clear and valid scientific information, but at the moment it seems very premature. I think that, especially in a dramatic moment like the one we are living in, it would be more prudent to prevent the temptation to build castles in the air.
COVID-19 is developing rapidly and invading the whole world in a real pandemic.
There is much discussion, appropriate or less appropriate, of this hot topic.
Recent declarations have focused attention on the risk of interactions between NSAIDs and COVID-19.
There are also theories on the potential interactions between the use of ACE inhibitors, the use of ibuprofen and the increased risk of infection.
At the moment, there are no data in the literature showing that this would be the case.
Pain patients may be reassured by their physicians on the safety of using ACE inhibitors and NSAIDs (especially ibuprofen), because there is nothing to show the potential for an increased risk of viral infection, and especially of COVID-19.
  3 in total

1.  Prevalence and risk factors of small airway dysfunction, and association with smoking, in China: findings from a national cross-sectional study.

Authors:  Dan Xiao; Zhengming Chen; Sinan Wu; Kewu Huang; Jianying Xu; Lan Yang; Yongjian Xu; Xiangyan Zhang; Chunxue Bai; Jian Kang; Pixin Ran; Huahao Shen; Fuqiang Wen; Wanzhen Yao; Tieying Sun; Guangliang Shan; Ting Yang; Yingxiang Lin; Jianguo Zhu; Ruiying Wang; Zhihong Shi; Jianping Zhao; Xianwei Ye; Yuanlin Song; Qiuyue Wang; Gang Hou; Yumin Zhou; Wen Li; Liren Ding; Hao Wang; Yahong Chen; Yanfei Guo; Fei Xiao; Yong Lu; Xiaoxia Peng; Biao Zhang; Zuomin Wang; Hong Zhang; Xiaoning Bu; Xiaolei Zhang; Li An; Shu Zhang; Zhixin Cao; Qingyuan Zhan; Yuanhua Yang; Lirong Liang; Zhao Liu; Xinran Zhang; Anqi Cheng; Bin Cao; Huaping Dai; Kian Fan Chung; Jiang He; Chen Wang
Journal:  Lancet Respir Med       Date:  2020-06-26       Impact factor: 30.700

2.  Clinical Characteristics of Covid-19 in China. Reply.

Authors:  Wei-Jie Guan; Nan-Shan Zhong
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2020-03-27       Impact factor: 91.245

3.  Antihypertensive drugs and risk of COVID-19? - Authors' reply.

Authors:  Lei Fang; George Karakiulakis; Michael Roth
Journal:  Lancet Respir Med       Date:  2020-03-26       Impact factor: 30.700

  3 in total
  10 in total

Review 1.  Colchicine as a Potential Therapeutic Agent Against Cardiovascular Complications of COVID-19: an Exploratory Review.

Authors:  Christodoulos Papadopoulos; Dimitrios Patoulias; Eleftherios Teperikidis; Dimitrios Mouselimis; Anastasios Tsarouchas; Maria Toumpourleka; Aristi Boulmpou; Constantinos Bakogiannis; Michael Doumas; Vassilios P Vassilikos
Journal:  SN Compr Clin Med       Date:  2020-08-04

2.  COVID-19 and NSAIDS: A Narrative Review of Knowns and Unknowns.

Authors:  Joseph V Pergolizzi; Giustino Varrassi; Peter Magnusson; Jo Ann LeQuang; Antonella Paladini; Robert Taylor; Charles Wollmuth; Frank Breve; Paul Christo
Journal:  Pain Ther       Date:  2020-05-24

3.  General Guidelines in the Management of an Obstetrical Patient on the Labor and Delivery Unit during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Authors:  Angela J Stephens; John R Barton; Nana-Ama Ankumah Bentum; Sean C Blackwell; Baha M Sibai
Journal:  Am J Perinatol       Date:  2020-04-28       Impact factor: 1.862

4.  NSAIDs for analgesia in the era of COVID-19.

Authors:  Daniel L Herzberg; Harry P Sukumaran; Eugene Viscusi
Journal:  Reg Anesth Pain Med       Date:  2020-06-03       Impact factor: 6.288

Review 5.  Pain Management and COVID-19: A Latin American Perspective.

Authors:  Marixa Guerrero; Pablo Castroman; Ovelio Quiroga; Maria Berenguel Cook; Marco Antonio Narvaez Tamayo; Lanfranco Venturoni; Joseph Pergolizzi; Martina Rekatsina; Giustino Varrassi
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2022-03-12

6.  Impact of COVID-19 on chronic pain structures: data from French national survey.

Authors:  Meggane Melchior; Mikhail Dziadzko; Séverine Conradi; Pierrick Poisbeau; Frédéric Aubrun
Journal:  J Comp Eff Res       Date:  2022-05-05       Impact factor: 2.040

Review 7.  Management of Osteoarthritis During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Authors:  Enrico Ragni; Laura Mangiavini; Marco Viganò; Anna Teresa Brini; Giuseppe Michele Peretti; Giuseppe Banfi; Laura de Girolamo
Journal:  Clin Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2020-06-22       Impact factor: 6.903

Review 8.  Healthcare at the time of COVID-19: A review of the current situation with emphasis on anesthesia providers.

Authors:  Martina Rekatsina; Antonella Paladini; Eleni Moka; Cheng Teng Yeam; Ivan Urits; Omar Viswanath; Alan D Kaye; John A Morgan; Giustino Varrassi
Journal:  Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol       Date:  2020-07-17

9.  The concern about ACE/ARB and COVID-19: Time to hold your horses!

Authors:  Joseph V Pergolizzi; Giustino Varrassi; Peter Magnusson; Jo Ann LeQuang; Marianna Leopoulou; Antonella Paladini; Robert Taylor; Charles Wollmuth; Frank Breve
Journal:  J Am Pharm Assoc (2003)       Date:  2020-07-31

10.  Updates on Palliative Medicine in the COVID-19 Era.

Authors:  Giustino Varrassi; Martina Rekatsina
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2022-01-09       Impact factor: 4.241

  10 in total

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