Eric J Rubin1, David P Harrington1, Joseph W Hogan1, Constantine Gatsonis1, Lindsey R Baden1, Mary Beth Hamel1. 1. From the Department of Biostatistics, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, and the Department of Data Sciences, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute - both in Boston (D.P.H.); and the Department of Biostatistics, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, RI (J.W.H., C.G.).
Chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine, alone or in combination with azithromycin, have been highly touted as potential therapies for Covid-19. The claims of efficacy are based largely on anecdotes and case series that have been described as being so persuasive that it would be unethical to perform studies with placebo controls.[1] On the basis of this “evidence,” these therapies have been recommended in many guidelines, including some national policies, and have been widely implemented. But is the evidence really that strong? An observational study now published in the Journal[2] examines the association between hydroxychloroquine use and outcomes in patients hospitalized with Covid-19 and suggests that this treatment is not a panacea.Geleris and colleagues studied data from 1376 consecutive patients with SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes Covid-19) who had been admitted to a New York City medical center between March 7 and April 8, 2020. Hospital guidance suggested the use of hydroxychloroquine for patients who had a resting oxygen saturation of less than 94% while they were breathing ambient air, but treatment decisions were at the clinicians’ discretion. A total of 59% of the patients were treated with hydroxychloroquine, with 60% of those treated with hydroxychloroquine also receiving azithromycin. The authors assessed the association between hydroxychloroquine use and a composite end point of intubation or death over a median follow-up of 22.5 days.In a simple, unadjusted comparison, the rate of death or intubation was more than twice as high among patients who received hydroxychloroquine as among those who did not. However, the clinical characteristics of the hydroxychloroquine-treated patients and of those who had not received hydroxychloroquine differed substantially. In the more detailed adjusted analyses, which were based on widely accepted methods to address confounding and selection bias, there was no evidence of a substantial difference in the rate of the composite end point of death or intubation (hazard ratio, 1.04; 95% confidence interval, 0.82 to 1.32). The findings were consistent in all the sensitivity analyses. In short, the authors used modern methods to rigorously analyze data that are available now, despite the well-understood limitations of observational studies.For interventions that can be ethically and practically investigated in a clinical trial, evidence generated from trials with a randomized control is rightly given priority over evidence from observational studies. Even the best adjustment methods used in observational studies can miss major systematic biases, especially in the midst of a response to a pandemic with a high infection rate and associated with such rapid and high mortality. Despite this, it is difficult to ignore the accumulating and potentially valuable observational data from large medical centers and other care settings around the world. Treatment decisions are being made today without clear guidance from trial results. It is unclear when reports from high-quality controlled trials will be available.Physicians caring for patients with Covid-19 are faced with important therapeutic choices. Should they use widely available agents such as hydroxychloroquine or azithromycin? The choice to use these drugs has already been made, probably in hundreds of thousands of patients, but with scant evidence about the risks and benefits. We have chosen to publish this report so that clinicians will have some information that is based on rigorous analyses of available observational data. However, this observational study is in no way a substitute for randomized, placebo-controlled trials. The findings of this study set broad parameters around the potential good (or harm) that these drugs could do. The results leave open the possibility that these agents could have a modest benefit but do not rule out a detrimental effect, something that will probably be learned only through well-designed and well-conducted randomized, controlled trials. The value of such trials has been known for a century.[3] It is disappointing that several months into the pandemic, we do not yet have results from controlled trials of a therapy that is being widely used. When we have little idea about appropriate therapy, we have an obligation to help by performing studies that will help us to learn together with our patients.
Authors: Joshua Geleris; Yifei Sun; Jonathan Platt; Jason Zucker; Matthew Baldwin; George Hripcsak; Angelena Labella; Daniel K Manson; Christine Kubin; R Graham Barr; Magdalena E Sobieszczyk; Neil W Schluger Journal: N Engl J Med Date: 2020-05-07 Impact factor: 91.245
Authors: Michelle N Meyer; Luke Gelinas; Barbara E Bierer; Sara Chandros Hull; Steven Joffe; David Magnus; Seema Mohapatra; Richard R Sharp; Kayte Spector-Bagdady; Jeremy Sugarman; Benjamin S Wilfond; Holly Fernandez Lynch Journal: Clin Trials Date: 2021-02-02 Impact factor: 2.486
Authors: Wesley H Self; Matthew W Semler; Lindsay M Leither; Jonathan D Casey; Derek C Angus; Roy G Brower; Steven Y Chang; Sean P Collins; John C Eppensteiner; Michael R Filbin; D Clark Files; Kevin W Gibbs; Adit A Ginde; Michelle N Gong; Frank E Harrell; Douglas L Hayden; Catherine L Hough; Nicholas J Johnson; Akram Khan; Christopher J Lindsell; Michael A Matthay; Marc Moss; Pauline K Park; Todd W Rice; Bryce R H Robinson; David A Schoenfeld; Nathan I Shapiro; Jay S Steingrub; Christine A Ulysse; Alexandra Weissman; Donald M Yealy; B Taylor Thompson; Samuel M Brown; Jay Steingrub; Howard Smithline; Bogdan Tiru; Mark Tidswell; Lori Kozikowski; Sherell Thornton-Thompson; Leslie De Souza; Peter Hou; Rebecca Baron; Anthony Massaro; Imoigele Aisiku; Lauren Fredenburgh; Raghu Seethala; Lily Johnsky; Richard Riker; David Seder; Teresa May; Michael Baumann; Ashley Eldridge; Christine Lord; Nathan Shapiro; Daniel Talmor; Thomas O’Mara; Charlotte Kirk; Kelly Harrison; Lisa Kurt; Margaret Schermerhorn; Valerie Banner-Goodspeed; Katherine Boyle; Nicole Dubosh; Michael Filbin; Kathryn Hibbert; Blair Parry; Kendall Lavin-Parsons; Natalie Pulido; Brendan Lilley; Carl Lodenstein; Justin Margolin; Kelsey Brait; Alan Jones; James Galbraith; Rebekah Peacock; Utsav Nandi; Taylor Wachs; Michael Matthay; Kathleen Liu; Kirsten Kangelaris; Ralph Wang; Carolyn Calfee; Kimberly Yee; Gregory Hendey; Steven Chang; George Lim; Nida Qadir; Andrea Tam; Rebecca Beutler; Joseph Levitt; Jenny Wilson; Angela Rogers; Rosemary Vojnik; Jonasel Roque; Timothy Albertson; James Chenoweth; Jason Adams; Skyler Pearson; Maya Juarez; Eyad Almasri; Mohamed Fayed; Alyssa Hughes; Shelly Hillard; Ryan Huebinger; Henry Wang; Elizabeth Vidales; Bela Patel; Adit Ginde; Marc Moss; Amiran Baduashvili; Jeffrey McKeehan; Lani Finck; Carrie Higgins; Michelle Howell; Ivor Douglas; Jason Haukoos; Terra Hiller; Carolynn Lyle; Alicia Cupelo; Emily Caruso; Claudia Camacho; Stephanie Gravitz; James Finigan; Christine Griesmer; Pauline Park; Robert Hyzy; Kristine Nelson; Kelli McDonough; Norman Olbrich; Mark Williams; Raj Kapoor; Jean Nash; Meghan Willig; Henry Ford; Jayna Gardner-Gray; Mayur Ramesh; Montefiore Moses; Michelle Ng Gong; Michael Aboodi; Ayesha Asghar; Omowunmi Amosu; Madeline Torres; Savneet Kaur; Jen-Ting Chen; Aluko Hope; Brenda Lopez; Kathleen Rosales; Jee Young You; Jarrod Mosier; Cameron Hypes; Bhupinder Natt; Bryan Borg; Elizabeth Salvagio Campbell; R Duncan Hite; Kristin Hudock; Autumn Cresie; Faysal Alhasan; Jose Gomez-Arroyo; Abhijit Duggal; Omar Mehkri; Andrei Hastings; Debasis Sahoo; Francois Abi Fadel; Susan Gole; Valerie Shaner; Allison Wimer; Yvonne Meli; Alexander King; Thomas Terndrup; Matthew Exline; Sonal Pannu; Emily Robart; Sarah Karow; Catherine Hough; Bryce Robinson; Nicholas Johnson; Daniel Henning; Monica Campo; Stephanie Gundel; Sakshi Seghal; Sarah Katsandres; Sarah Dean; Akram Khan; Olivia Krol; Milad Jouzestani; Peter Huynh; Alexandra Weissman; Donald Yealy; Denise Scholl; Peter Adams; Bryan McVerry; David Huang; Derek Angus; Jordan Schooler; Steven Moore; Clark Files; Chadwick Miller; Kevin Gibbs; Mary LaRose; Lori Flores; Lauren Koehler; Caryn Morse; John Sanders; Caitlyn Langford; Kristen Nanney; Masiku MdalaGausi; Phyllis Yeboah; Peter Morris; Jamie Sturgill; Sherif Seif; Evan Cassity; Sanjay Dhar; Marjolein de Wit; Jessica Mason; Andrew Goodwin; Greg Hall; Abbey Grady; Amy Chamberlain; Samuel Brown; Joseph Bledsoe; Lindsay Leither; Ithan Peltan; Nathan Starr; Melissa Fergus; Valerie Aston; Quinn Montgomery; Rilee Smith; Mardee Merrill; Katie Brown; Brent Armbruster; Estelle Harris; Elizabeth Middleton; Robert Paine; Stacy Johnson; Macy Barrios; John Eppensteiner; Alexander Limkakeng; Lauren McGowan; Tedra Porter; Andrew Bouffler; J. Clancy Leahy; Bennet deBoisblanc; Matthew Lammi; Kyle Happel; Paula Lauto; Wesley Self; Jonathan Casey; Matthew Semler; Sean Collins; Frank Harrell; Christopher Lindsell; Todd Rice; William Stubblefield; Christopher Gray; Jakea Johnson; Megan Roth; Margaret Hays; Donna Torr; Arwa Zakaria; David Schoenfeld; Taylor Thompson; Douglas Hayden; Nancy Ringwood; Cathryn Oldmixon; Christine Ulysse; Richard Morse; Ariela Muzikansky; Laura Fitzgerald; Samuel Whitaker; Adrian Lagakos; Roy Brower; Lora Reineck; Neil Aggarwal; Karen Bienstock; Michelle Freemer; Myron Maclawiw; Gail Weinmann; Laurie Morrison; Mark Gillespie; Richard Kryscio; Daniel Brodie; Wojciech Zareba; Anne Rompalo; Michael Boeckh; Polly Parsons; Jason Christie; Jesse Hall; Nicholas Horton; Laurie Zoloth; Neal Dickert; Deborah Diercks Journal: JAMA Date: 2020-12-01 Impact factor: 56.272
Authors: Marco Francone; Franco Iafrate; Giorgio Maria Masci; Simona Coco; Francesco Cilia; Lucia Manganaro; Valeria Panebianco; Chiara Andreoli; Maria Chiara Colaiacomo; Maria Antonella Zingaropoli; Maria Rosa Ciardi; Claudio Maria Mastroianni; Francesco Pugliese; Francesco Alessandri; Ombretta Turriziani; Paolo Ricci; Carlo Catalano Journal: Eur Radiol Date: 2020-07-04 Impact factor: 5.315