| Literature DB >> 33981731 |
Xiao-Ce Dai1, Zhuo-Yu An2, Zi-Yang Wang2, Zi-Zhen Wang3, Yi-Ren Wang2.
Abstract
Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs) and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) share a target receptor with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). The use of ACEIs/ARBs may cause angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 receptor upregulation, facilitating the entry of SARS-CoV-2 into host cells. There is concern that the use of ACEIs/ARBs could increase the risks of severe COVID-19 and mortality. The impact of discontinuing these drugs in patients with COVID-19 remains uncertain. We aimed to assess the association between the use of ACEIs/ARBs and the risks of mortality and severe disease in patients with COVID-19. A systematic search was performed in PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, and MedRxiv.org from December 1, 2019, to June 20, 2020. We also identified additional citations by manually searching the reference lists of eligible articles. Forty-two observational studies including 63,893 participants were included. We found that the use of ACEIs/ARBs was not significantly associated with a reduction in the relative risk of all-cause mortality [odds ratio (OR) = 0.87, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) = 0.75-1.00; I 2 = 57%, p = 0.05]. We found no significant reduction in the risk of severe disease in the ACEI subgroup (OR = 0.95, 95% CI = 0.88-1.02, I 2 = 50%, p = 0.18), the ARB subgroup (OR = 1.03, 95% CI = 0.94-1.13, I 2 = 62%, p = 0.48), or the ACEI/ARB subgroup (OR = 0.83, 95% CI = 0.65-1.08, I 2 = 67%, p = 0.16). Moreover, seven studies showed no significant difference in the duration of hospitalization between the two groups (mean difference = 0.33, 95% CI = -1.75 to 2.40, p = 0.76). In conclusion, the use of ACEIs/ARBs appears to not have a significant effect on mortality, disease severity, or duration of hospitalization in COVID-19 patients. On the basis of the findings of this meta-analysis, there is no support for the cessation of treatment with ACEIs or ARBs in patients with COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors; angiotensin receptor blockers; coronavirus disease 2019; death; hypertension
Year: 2021 PMID: 33981731 PMCID: PMC8107232 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2021.609857
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
Figure 1Flowchart of article selection process.
Baseline characteristics of patients assessed in the studies included in the meta-analysis.
| Andrea et al. ( | 191 | 42 (28) | NA | 68.6 | CAD: 14.7% | 69 | Patients with hypertension and COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | Age, Heart failure, CKD. | 7 |
| Ashraf et al. ( | 100 | 12 | 58 (48–68) | 64% | DM: 26% | 19 | Patients with hypertension and COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | The analyses were not adjusted for multiple comparisons. | 6 |
| Baker et al. ( | 316 | 81 | 75 (60–83) | 55% | DM: 27% | 311 | Patients with hypertension and COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | The analyses were not adjusted for multiple comparisons. | 6 |
| Bean et al. ( | 205 | 53 (25.9%) | 63 ± 20 | 52% | DM: 62 (30.2%) | 46 | Patients with hypertension and COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | Age, gender, comorbidities (hypertension, DM, IHD, and heart failure) | 7 |
| Benelli et al. ( | 411 | 72 | 66.8 ± 16.4 | 87% | DM: 16% | 135 | Patients with hypertension and COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | Bonferroni correction was used to adjust for multiple testing. | 8 |
| Bravi et al. ( | 543 | 129 (very severe/lethal) | NA | NA | NA | 450 | Patients with hypertension and COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | All estimates have been adjusted for age, gender, diabetes, major cardiovascular diseases, COPD, cancer. and renal diseases. | 8 |
| Chen et al. ( | 123 | 31 | 57.7 ± 12.7 | 43% | DM: 11% CAD: (12%) | 11 | Patients with hypertension and COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | The analyses were not adjusted for multiple comparisons. | 7 |
| Choi et al. ( | 1,585 | 192 | 66.5 ± 14 | 42.80% | DM: 44.9% Chronic lung diseases: 19.5% | 892 | Propensity score-matched hospitalized patients with COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | Adjusted for age, sex, region of hospitals, comorbidities (diabetes, chronic lung disease, and major neurologic diseases), Charlson comorbidity index, and treatment modalities. | 7 |
| Dauchet et al. ( | 288 | NA | NA | 62% | DM: 40 (13.89%) CVD: 48 (16.67%) Pulmonary disease: 31 (10.76%) CKD: 9 (3.13%) | 62 | NA | Age, gender, weight, comorbidities (DM, pulmonary disease, kidney diseases, CVD) | 7 |
| De Spiegeleer et al. ( | 154 | NA | 86 ± 7 | 33% | DM: 18% | 30 | Residents at two elderly care homes with COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | Age, sex, functional status, diabetes mellitus, hypertension | 7 |
| Felice et al. ( | 133 | 33 | 72.8 ± 12.3 | 64.70% | DM: 25.6% CAD: 42.1% COPD: 10.5% | 82 | Hospitalized patients with COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | Adjusted for age, gender, body mass index, days with symptoms prior to admission, previous cardiovascular events, diabetes, and cancer. | 9 |
| Feng et al. ( | 476 | 38 | 53.0 (40.0–64.0) | 56.90% | DM: 49 (10.29%) CVD: 38 (7.98%) Pulmonary disease: 22 (4.62%) CKD: 4 (0.84%) | 35 | Patients with hypertension hospitalized with COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs matched to the experimental group according to disease severity. | Age, sex, smoking, alcohol consumption | 7 |
| Fosbøl et al. ( | 4,480 | 478 | 54.7 (40.9–72.0) | 47.90% | DM: 411 Heart Failure: 243 COPD: 634 CKD: 172 | 895 | Hospitalized patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | Fully adjusted model includes the following covariates: age; sex; highest obtained educational level; medical history of myocardial infarction, heart failure, kidney disease, stroke, peripheral artery disease, atrial fibrillation, diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and malignancy; and use of the following concomitant medications: other antihypertensive drugs, lipid-lowering drugs, and anticoagulation. | 8 |
| Gao et al. ( | 850 | 34 | 64.24 (11.2) | 52.10% | DM: 26.8% CAD: 16.7% | 183 | Hospitalized patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | Adjusted for age, sex, medical history of diabetes, insulin-treated diabetes, myocardial infarction, underwent PCI/CABG, renal failure, stroke, heart failure, and COPD. | 9 |
| Giorgi et al. ( | 2,653 | 217 | 63.2 | 50% | DM: 12% CAD: 7% | 818 | Symptomatic patients with COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | Adjused for age and comorbidities. | 9 |
| Guo et al. ( | 187 | 43 | 58.5 ± 14.6 | 49% | DM: 15% CAD: 11.2% | 19 (10%) | Patients with COVID-19 symptoms that required hospitalization that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | NA | 8 |
| Huang et al. ( | 50 | 2 | 61.7 ± 12.9 | 54% | DM: 8% CAD: 2% | 20 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | Unadjusted comparisons | 8 |
| Ip et al. ( | 1,129 | 399 | NA | NA | NA | 460 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | Adjusted for age, the effect of hypertension on mortality was greatly diminished, with a reduction in odds-ratio by over half; and completely disappeared when adjusted for other major covariates. | 7 |
| Jung et al. ( | 5,179 | 84 | 44.6 ± 18 | 44% | DM: 17% CAD: 1% CKD: 5% | 762 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | Adjusted for age, sex, Charlson Comorbidity Index, immunosuppression, and hospital type. | 7 |
| Jurado et al. ( | 290 | NA | NA | NA | NA | 190 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were not exposed to ACEI or ARB. | NA | 7 |
| Khera et al. ( | 10,196 | 1,128 | NA | 54% | DM: 48% CAD: 5% CKD: 27% | 6,040 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were not exposed to ACEI or ARB. | NA | 7 |
| Kim et al. ( | 2,491 | 420 | 62 (50–75) | 53% | DM: 33% CAD: 14% CKD: 16% | 573 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were not exposed to ACEI or ARB | Adjusting for age group, sex, and race/ethnicity and underlying conditions. | 8 |
| Lee et al. ( | 8,266 | 112 | 44.4 ± 19.1 | 38% | DM: 17% CAD: 6% | 977 | Hospitalized patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were not exposed to ACEI or ARB | Adjusted for age, sex, the history of comorbidities (hypertension, diabetes mellitus, cancer, COPD, stroke, coronary artery disease, heart failure, and chronic kidney disease) before diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2. | 7 |
| Li et al. ( | 362 | 77 | 66.0 (59.0–73.0) | 52.20% | DM: 127 (35.1%) CVD: 62 (17.13%) CKD: 35 (9.67%) | 118 | Patients with hypertension hospitalized with COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | Age, gender, comorbidities (DM, cerebrovascular disease, coronary heart disease, digestive disorders, respiratory disease, neurological disease, solid tumor, CKD) | 6 |
| Liabeuf et al. ( | 268 | 63 | 73 (61–84) | 58% | DM: 21% CAD: 61% COPD: 10% CKD:7% Restrictive lung disease: 6% | 96 | Hospitalized patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were not exposed to ACEI or ARB | Adjustment for age, sex, coronary heart disease, BMI. | 8 |
| Liu et al. ( | 78 | NA | 65.2 ± 10.7 | 55% | NA | 12 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were not exposed to ACEI or ARB. | Adjustment was by multivariable logistic regression modeling with sex variable | 7 |
| Mancia et al. ( | 6,272 | NA | 68 ± 13 | 63% | CVD: 1,891 (30.1%) CKD: 651 (10.4%) | 2,896 | 30,759 beneficiaries of the Regional Health Service, matched to the experimental group according to sex, age, and municipality of residence | Drugs (antihypertensive drugs, oral antidiabetic drugs), comorbidities (CVD, respiratory disease, kidney disease, cancer), and chronic related conditions | 7 |
| Mehta et al. ( | 1,735 | NA | NA | 57% | DM: 46% CAD: 22% | 214 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were not exposed to ACEI or ARB. | Unadjusted comparisons | 7 |
| Meng et al. ( | 417 | NA | 64.50 (55.80–69.00) | 57.10% | DM: 5 (11.9%) CVD: 8 (19.0%) Pulmonary disease: 225 (8.5%) | 17 | Patients with COVID-19 that had hypertension comorbidity, based on treatment, but were taking non-ACEI/ARB anti-hypertension drugs. | Age, sex, symptoms, and signs | 8 |
| Peng et al. ( | 112 | 17 | 62 (55–67) | 47% | DM: 20% CAD: (55%) | 22 | Patients with COVID-19 symptoms that required hospitalization that have hypertension taking other anti-hypertension drugs. | NA | 6 |
| Rentsch et al. ( | 585 | 17 | 66.1 (60.4–71) | 52% | DM: 30% CAD: 15% | 263 | Patients with symptoms that required hospitalization with COVID-19 that were taking other anti-hypertension drugs | Age, sex, race/ethnicity, residence type | 7 |
| Reynolds et al. ( | 5894 | NA | NA | NA | NA | 1,692 | Patients with COVID-19 that had hypertension comorbidity, based on treatment, but were taking non-ACEI/ARB anti-hypertension drugs | Age, sex, race, ethnic group, BMI, smoking history, history of hypertension, myocardial infarction, heart failure, DM, CKD, obstructive lung disease, and other classes of medication | 9 |
| Rhee et al. ( | 832 | 34 | NA | 53% | DM: 100% CAD: 27% CKD: 19% | 327 | Patients with COVID-19 that were taking non-ACEI/ARB anti-hypertension drugs | Adjustment for age, sex, comorbidity, and medication | 8 |
| Richardson et al. ( | 1,366 | NA | 63 (52–75) | 60% | NA | 456 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were taking non-ACEI/ARB anti-hypertension drugs | Unadjusted comparisons | 7 |
| Tan et al. ( | 100 | 11 | NA | 51% | DM: 28% CAD:(18%) CKD: (9%) | 31 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were taking non-ACEI/ARB anti-hypertension drugs. | Unadjusted comparisons | 7 |
| Tedeschi et al. ( | 311 | 131 | 76 (67–83) | 72% | CVD: 131 (42%) DM: 74 (24%) COPD: 49 (16%) | 175 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were taking non-ACEI/ARB anti-hypertension drugs. | Adjusted for age, gender, presence of CV comorbidities and COPD | 8 |
| Yan et al. ( | 610 | 4 | 48.75 (±14.19) | 51.10% | DM: 9.84% CVD: 2.62% | 58 | 48,667 population-based controls from Zheijang, China with COVID-19 and hypertension that were taking non-ACEI/ARB anti-hypertension drugs. | Age, sex, BMI, and relevant comorbidities | 8 |
| Yang et al. ( | 251 | 21 | 66.0 (60.0–73.0) | 49% | DM: 55 (21.91%) CVD: 35 (13.94%) Pulmonary disease: 12 (4.78%) CKD: 4 (1.59%) | 43 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were taking non-ACEI/ARB anti-hypertension drugs. | Age, sex, BMI, complications (DM, pulmonary disease, hepatic disease, cardiopathy, neurological disease, immune diseases), other treatments (glucocorticoid, antiviral, antibiotic, immunoglobulin), and symptoms | 8 |
| Zeng et al. ( | 274 | 21 | NA | 55% | DM: 42 (15%) CVD: 31 (11%) | 28 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were taking non-ACEI/ARB anti-hypertension drugs. | Age, sex, weight, BMI, comorbidities (obstructive pulmonary disease, CKD, CVD, DM, cerebrovascular disease, chronic liver disease, cancer), signs, and symptoms | 7 |
| Zhang et al. ( | 522 | NA | 64 (56–69) | 55.75% | DM: 126 (11.83%) CVD: 70 (13.41%) Pulmonary disease: 2 (0.38%) CKD: 18 (3.45%) | 174 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were taking non-ACEI/ARB anti-hypertension drugs. | Adjusted for age, gender, comorbidities (DM, coronary heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, and CKD), medication (antiviral drug and lipid lowering drug), symptoms, and signs. | 9 |
| Zhou et al. ( | 36 | 7 (19.4%) | 64.8 ± 10.1 | 53% | DM: 9 (25.0%) CAD:7 (19.4%) | 15 | Patients with COVID-19 with hypertension that were n taking non-ACEI/ARB anti-hypertension drugs. | age, sex, hospitalization time, time from onset to hospital admission | 8 |
| Zhou et al. ( | 3,572 | NA | 66 (58–72) | 51.10% | NA | 989 | Hospitalized patients with COVID-19 that were taking non-ACEI/ARB anti-hypertension drugs. | Adjustment for age, gender, disease severity, comorbidities, and CCB medication | 7 |
BMI, body mass index; CKD, chronic kidney disease; CVD, cardiovascular disease; DM, diabetes mellitus; IHD, ischaemic heart disease; NOS, Newcastle-Ottawa Scale.
Figure 2Forest plot showing the effects of ACEIs/ARBs on all-cause mortality in patients with COVID-19. SE, standard error; IV, inverse variance; df, degrees of freedom.
Figure 3Forest plot showing the effects of ACEIs and ARBs on the severity of COVID-19. SE, standard error; IV, inverse variance; df, degrees of freedom.
Figure 4Forest plot showing the effects of ACEIs/ARBs on hospitalization duration in patients with COVID-19. SE, standard error; IV, inverse variance; df, degrees of freedom.