| Literature DB >> 32887691 |
Arnav Agarwal1,2,3,4, Bram Rochwerg1,2,5,6, François Lamontagne7,4,8, Reed Ac Siemieniuk1,2,4,5, Thomas Agoritsas1,9,10,4,8, Lisa Askie11, Lyubov Lytvyn1,4, Yee-Sin Leo12,5,8,6, Helen Macdonald13,14,4, Linan Zeng1,4, Wagdy Amin15,5,6, André Ricardo Araujo da Silva16, Diptesh Aryal17, Fabian AJ Barragan18, Frederique Jacquerioz Bausch19,5,6, Erlina Burhan20,5,6, Carolyn S Calfee21,8,6, Maurizio Cecconi14,5,8, Binila Chacko22, Duncan Chanda23,5,6, Vu Quoc Dat24,5,6, An De Sutter25,6, Bin Du26,5,6, Stephen Freedman27, Heike Geduld28,5,8,6, Patrick Gee29,5,8,6, Matthias Gotte30, Nerina Harley31,6, Madiha Hashimi32,5,6, Beverly Hunt33,6, Fyezah Jehan34, Sushil K Kabra35,36,5,6, Seema Kanda37,5,8,6, Yae-Jean Kim38,5,8,6, Niranjan Kissoon39,5,8,6, Sanjeev Krishna40, Krutika Kuppalli11, Arthur Kwizera36,5,8,6, Marta Lado Castro-Rial11, Thiago Lisboa41, Rakesh Lodha35, Imelda Mahaka42,5,6, Hela Manai43,5,8,6, Marc Mendelson44, Giovanni Battista Migliori45, Greta Mino46,5,6, Emmanuel Nsutebu47,5,6, Jacobus Preller11, Natalia Pshenichnaya48,5,6, Nida Qadir49,5,8,6, Pryanka Relan11, Saniya Sabzwari34,5,6, Rohit Sarin3,10,5,8,6, Manu Shankar-Hari50,6, Michael Sharland40,5,6, Yinzhong Shen51,5,8,6, Shalini Sri Ranganathan52,5,6, Joao P Souza53,5,6, Miriam Stegemann54,6, Ronald Swanstrom55, Sebastian Ugarte56,5,6, Tim Uyeki57, Sridhar Venkatapuram58,5,6, Dubula Vuyiseka59,5,6, Ananda Wijewickrama60,5,6, Lien Tran61, Dena Zeraatkar1,4, Jessica J Bartoszko1,4, Long Ge1,9,13,4, Romina Brignardello-Petersen1,4, Andrew Owen62,4, Gordon Guyatt1,2,4, Janet Diaz11,4,63, Leticia Kawano-Dourado64,5,8,6, Michael Jacobs65,5,6,63, Per Olav Vandvik10,66,4,63.
Abstract
UPDATES: This is the twelfth version (eleventh update) of the living guideline, replacing earlier versions (available as data supplements). New recommendations will be published as updates to this guideline. CLINICAL QUESTION: What is the role of drugs in the treatment of patients with covid-19? CONTEXT: The evidence base for therapeutics for covid-19 is evolving with numerous randomised controlled trials (RCTs) recently completed and under way. The emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants (such as omicron) and subvariants are also changing the role of therapeutics. This update provides updated recommendations for remdesivir, addresses the use of combination therapy with corticosteroids, interleukin-6 (IL-6) receptor blockers, and janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors in patients with severe or critical covid-19, and modifies previous recommendations for the neutralising monoclonal antibodies sotrovimab and casirivimab-imdevimab in patients with non-severe covid-19. NEW OR UPDATED RECOMMENDATIONS: • Remdesivir: a conditional recommendation for its use in patients with severe covid-19; and a conditional recommendation against its use in patients with critical covid-19. • Concomitant use of IL-6 receptor blockers (tocilizumab or sarilumab) and the JAK inhibitor baricitinib: these drugs may now be combined, in addition to corticosteroids, in patients with severe or critical covid-19. • Sotrovimab and casirivimab-imdevimab: strong recommendations against their use in patients with covid-19, replacing the previous conditional recommendations for their use. UNDERSTANDING THE NEW RECOMMENDATIONS: When moving from new evidence to updated recommendations, the Guideline Development Group (GDG) considered a combination of evidence assessing relative benefits and harms, values and preferences, and feasibility issues. For remdesivir, new trial data were added to a previous subgroup analysis and provided sufficiently trustworthy evidence to demonstrate benefits in patients with severe covid-19, but not critical covid-19. The GDG considered benefits of remdesivir to be modest and of moderate certainty for key outcomes such as mortality and mechanical ventilation, resulting in a conditional recommendation. For baricitinib, the GDG considered clinical trial evidence (RECOVERY) demonstrating reduced risk of death in patients already receiving corticosteroids and IL-6 receptor blockers. The GDG acknowledged that the clinical trials were not representative of the world population and that the risk-benefit balance may be less advantageous, particularly in patients who are immunosuppressed at higher risk of opportunistic infections (such as serious fungal, viral, or bacteria), those already deteriorating where less aggressive or stepwise addition of immunosuppressive medications may be preferred, and in areas where certain pathogens such as HIV or tuberculosis, are of concern. The panel anticipated that there would be situations where clinicians may opt for less aggressive immunosuppressive therapy or to combine medications in a stepwise fashion in patients who are deteriorating. The decision to combine the medications will depend on their availability, and the treating clinician's perception of the risk-benefit balance associated with combination immunosuppressive therapy, particularly in patient populations at risk of opportunistic infections who may have been under-represented in clinical trials. When making a strong recommendation against the use of monoclonal antibodies for patients with covid-19, the GDG considered in vitro neutralisation data demonstrating that sotrovimab and casirivimab-imdevimab evaluated in clinical trials have meaningfully reduced neutralisation activity of the currently circulating variants of SARS-CoV-2 and their subvariants. There was consensus among the panel that the absence of in vitro neutralisation activity strongly suggests absence of clinical effectiveness of these monoclonal antibodies. However, there was also consensus regarding the need for clinical trial evidence in order to confirm clinical efficacy of new monoclonal antibodies that reliably neutralise the circulating strains in vitro. Whether emerging new variants and subvariants might be susceptible to sotrovimab, casirivimab-imdevimab, or other anti-SARS-CoV-2 monoclonal antibodies cannot be predicted. PRIOR RECOMMENDATIONS: • Recommended for patients with severe or critical covid-19—strong recommendations for systemic corticosteroids; IL-6 receptor blockers (tocilizumab or sarilumab) in combination with corticosteroids; and baricitinib as an alternative to IL-6 receptor blockers, in combination with corticosteroids. • Recommended for patients with non-severe covid-19 at highest risk of hospitalisation—a strong recommendation for nirmatrelvir/ritonavir; conditional recommendations for molnupiravir and remdesivir. • Not recommended for patients with non-severe covid-19—a conditional recommendation against systemic corticosteroids; a strong recommendation against convalescent plasma; a recommendation against fluvoxamine, except in the context of a clinical trial; and a strong recommendation against colchicine. • Not recommended for patients with non-severe covid-19 at low risk of hospitalisation—a conditional recommendation against nirmatrelvir/ritonavir. • Not recommended for patients with severe or critical covid-19—a recommendation against convalescent plasma except in the context of a clinical trial; and a conditional recommendation against the JAK inhibitors ruxolitinib and tofacitinib. • Not recommended, regardless of covid-19 disease severity—a strong recommendations against hydroxychloroquine and against lopinavir/ritonavir; and a recommendation against ivermectin except in the context of a clinical trial. ABOUT THIS GUIDELINE: This living guideline from the World Health Organization (WHO) incorporates new evidence to dynamically update recommendations for covid-19 therapeutics. The GDG typically evaluates a therapy when the WHO judges sufficient evidence is available to make a recommendation. While the GDG takes an individual patient perspective in making recommendations, it also considers resource implications, acceptability, feasibility, equity, and human rights. This guideline was developed according to standards and methods for trustworthy guidelines, making use of an innovative process to achieve efficiency in dynamic updating of recommendations. The methods are aligned with the WHO Handbook for Guideline Development and according to a pre-approved protocol (planning proposal) by the Guideline Review Committee (GRC). A box at the end of the article outlines key methodological aspects of the guideline process. MAGIC Evidence Ecosystem Foundation provides methodological support, including the coordination of living systematic reviews with network meta-analyses to inform the recommendations. The full version of the guideline is available online in MAGICapp and in PDF, with a summary version here in The BMJ. These formats should facilitate adaptation, which is strongly encouraged by WHO to contextualise recommendations in a healthcare system to maximise impact. Future recommendations: Recommendations on anticoagulation are planned for the next update to this guideline. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32887691 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.m3379
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138