| Literature DB >> 33683189 |
Zixin Shu1, Kai Chang1,2, Yana Zhou3,4, Chaoan Peng5, Xugui Li6, Wei Cai7, Li Wei8, Qiguang Zheng1, Haoyu Tian1, Jianan Xia1, Kuo Yang1, Ning Wang1, Jifen Liu3,4, Xiaojun Min3,4, Dengying Yan3,4, Jing Sun3,4, Huan Wu1, Xiaomeng Li1, Yi Zheng1, Zecong Yu1, Xi Lu1, Yuxia Yang1, Ting Jia1, Jinghui Ji1, Qunzheng Zou1, Yinyan Wang1, Minzhong Xiao3,4, Qing Zhang3,4, Yajuan Xiong3,4, Feng Sun3,4, Qiang Zhu1, Xingxing Jiang1, Guodong Wang1, Sydney Chi-Wai Tang9, Junhua Zhang10, Xiuyang Li11, Nevin Zhang12, Boli Zhang13, Xiaolin Tong11, Baoyan Liu14, Xuezhong Zhou1, Kam Wa Chan9, Xiaodong Li3,4.
Abstract
Chinese medicine (CM) was extensively used to treat COVID-19 in China. We aimed to evaluate the real-world effectiveness of add-on semi-individualized CM during the outbreak. A retrospective cohort of 1788 adult confirmed COVID-19 patients were recruited from 2235 consecutive linked records retrieved from five hospitals in Wuhan during 15 January to 13 March 2020. The mortality of add-on semi-individualized CM users and non-users was compared by inverse probability weighted hazard ratio (HR) and by propensity score matching. Change of biomarkers was compared between groups, and the frequency of CMs used was analyzed. Subgroup analysis was performed to stratify disease severity and dose of CM exposure. The crude mortality was 3.8% in the semi-individualized CM user group and 17.0% among the non-users. Add-on CM was associated with a mortality reduction of 58% (HR = 0.42, 95% CI: 0.23 to 0.77, [Formula: see text] = 0.005) among all COVID-19 cases and 66% (HR = 0.34, 95% CI: 0.15 to 0.76, [Formula: see text] = 0.009) among severe/critical COVID-19 cases demonstrating dose-dependent response, after inversely weighted with propensity score. The result was robust in various stratified, weighted, matched, adjusted and sensitivity analyses. Severe/critical patients that received add-on CM had a trend of stabilized D-dimer level after 3-7 days of admission when compared to baseline. Immunomodulating and anti-asthmatic CMs were most used. Add-on semi-individualized CM was associated with significantly reduced mortality, especially among severe/critical cases. Chinese medicine could be considered as an add-on regimen for trial use.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Chinese Medicine; Cohort; Coronavirus Disease 2019; Effectiveness; Integrative Medicine; Mortality
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33683189 DOI: 10.1142/S0192415X21500257
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Chin Med ISSN: 0192-415X Impact factor: 4.667