| Literature DB >> 33791689 |
Michael Stack, Keith Sacco, Riccardo Castagnoli, Alicia A Livinski, Luigi D Notarangelo, Michail S Lionakis.
Abstract
ImportanceThe Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK) regulates B cell and macrophage signaling, development, survival, and activation. BTK inhibition was shown to protect against lethal influenza-induced acute lung injury in mice. Inhibiting BTK has been hypothesized to ameliorate lung injury in patients with severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). ObjectiveTo evaluate the use of BTK inhibitors (BTKinibs) during COVID-19 and assess how they may affect patient outcomes.Evidence ReviewWe searched PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science: Core on December 30, 2020. Clinical studies with at least 5 COVID-19 patients treated with BTKinibs were included. Case reports and reviews were excluded.FindingsOne hundred twenty-five articles were identified, 6 of which met inclusion criteria. Sample size ranged from 6 to 126 patients. Patient populations included subjects hospitalized with COVID-19 (6/6) and admitted to the intensive care unit (5/6). Patient age ranged between 35 and 98 years. Four studies included patients already receiving BTKinibs for their lymphoproliferative disease, 1 for Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia and 3 for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The most common clinical outcomes measured were oxygen requirements (4/6) and hospitalization rate or duration (3/6). Differences in standard-of-care reflected the date of study and pre-existing conditions in the various patient cohorts. Full-dose acalabrutinib was evaluated in 2 studies, one study evaluated full-dose ibrutinib, and another study evaluated both ibrutinib and acalabrutinib. The remainder 2 studies described outcomes in CLL patients on multiple BTKinibs and other CLL-targeted treatments. Three studies showed decreased oxygen requirements in patients who started or continued BTKinibs. All three studies that evaluated hospitalization rate or duration found favorable outcomes in those on BTKinibs. Conclusions and RelevanceBTKinib use was associated with decreased oxygen requirements and decreased hospitalization rates and duration. However, randomized clinical trials are needed to validate the beneficial effects of BTKinibs for acute SARS-CoV-2 infection.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33791689 PMCID: PMC8010740 DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-319342/v1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Sq
Figure 1Flow Diagram of Inclusion of Studies in our Analysis.
Summary of studies evaluating clinical outcomes following BTK inhibitor use in acute SARS-CoV-2 infection included in our analysis.
| Study | PMCID | Type of Study | Population Size | Setting | Median age in years (range) | Malignancy | Drug (dose) | Outcome Measured |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wilkinson, T., et al. | PMC7393340 | Phase I and II (randomized, unblinded, controlled) | Phase I: 60 | Hospitalized, including ICU | NA | NA | Acalabrutinib (100mg twice daily for 10 days) | Resolution (Time to clinical improvement of at least 2 severity points on a 9-point category ordinal scale), discharge from hospital |
| Treon, S.P., et al. | PMC7243149 | Case-series | 6 | Hospitalized and non-hospitalized, including ICU | 66 (58–72) | WM | Ibrutinib (420mg daily, one patient with 140mg daily) | Hospitalization, oxygen requirements, resolution of symptoms |
| Scarfò, L., et al. | PMC7347048 | Case-cohort | Total 190 | Hospitalized (including ICU) and non-hospitalized | 72 (48–94) | CLL, SLL | ND | Hospitalization rate, resolution of symptoms, survival |
| Roschewski, M., et al. | PMC7274761 | Prospective Interventional | 19 | Hospitalized requiring oxygen support | 61 (45–84) | NA | Acalabrutinib (100mg twice daily for 10–14 days) | Oxygen requirements, time to extubation |
| Mato, A.R., et al. | PMC7472711 | Case-cohort | Total 198 (BTKi monotherapy 54; BTKinib with other agents+ 14) | Hospitalized (including ICU) and non-hospitalized | 70.5 (38–98) | CLL | ND | Overall survival, ICU admission, oxygen Requirements |
| Thibaud, S., et al. | PMC7276870 | Case-series | 8 | Hospitalized, including ICU | 72 (49–88) | CLL | Ibrutinib (420 or 140 mg daily) | Hospitalization duration, maximal oxygen requirement |
Risk-of-Bias Analyses of the 6 clinical studies included in our analysis.