| Literature DB >> 34130113 |
Paul E Alexander1, Robin Armstrong2, George Fareed3, John Lotus4, Ramin Oskoui5, Chad Prodromos6, Harvey A Risch7, Howard C Tenenbaum8, Craig M Wax9, Parvez Dara10, Peter A McCullough11, Kulvinder K Gill12.
Abstract
The outbreak of COVID-19 from severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has spread all over the world with tremendous morbidity and mortality in the elderly. In-hospital treatment addresses the multifaceted nature of the illness including initial viral replication, cytokine storm, and endothelial injury with thrombosis. We identified nine reports of early treatment outcomes in COVID-19 nursing home patients. Multi-drug therapy including hydroxychloroquine with one or more anti-infectives, corticosteroids, and antithrombotic anti-blood clotting agents can be extended to seniors in the nursing home setting without hospitalization. Data from nine studies found hydroxychloroquine-based multidrug regimens were associated with a statistically significant > 60% reduction in mortality. Going forward, we conclude that early empiric treatment for the elderly with COVID-19 in the nursing home setting (or similar congregated settings with elderly residents/patients e.g. LTF or ALF) has a reasonable probability of success and acceptable safety. This group remains our highest at-risk group and warrants acute treatment focus prior to symptoms worsening. Given the rapidity and severity of SARS-CoV-2 outbreaks in nursing homes, in-center treatment of acute COVID-19 patients is a reasonable strategy to reduce the risks of hospitalization and death. If elderly high-risk patients in such congregated nursing home type settings are allowed to worsen with no early treatment, they may be too sick and fragile to benefit from in-hospital therapeutics and are at risk for pulmonary failure, life-ending micro-thrombi of the lungs, kidneys etc. The issue is timing of therapeutics, and we argue that early treatment before hospitalization, is the right time and can potentially save lives, especially among our higher-risk elderly populations hit hardest by severe illness and death from COVID-19. We must reiterate, we are talking about 'early' treatment before the disease is far along in the disease sequelae where the patient then needs hospitalization and aggressive interventions. We are referring to the initial days e.g. day one, post infection when symptoms emerge or there is strong clinical suspicion. This early therapeutic option deserves serious and urgent consideration by the medical establishment and respective decision-makers. Doctors must be allowed their clinical discretion in how they optimally treat their patients. Doctors must be brave and trust their skilled judgements and do all to save the lives of their patients. We therefore hypothesize that early outpatient ambulatory treatment, once initiated as soon as symptoms begin in high-risk positive persons, would significantly reduce hospitalizations and prevent deaths. Specifically, the provision of early multi-drug sequenced therapy with repurposed drugs will reduce hospitalization and death in elderly patients being cared for in long-term-care facilities. The most important implications of our hypothesis are: 1) hospitalizations and deaths would be reduced 2) transmission would be reduced due to the mitigation of symptoms and 3) recovery following infection and treatment provides for natural exposure immunity that is broad based, durable, and robust (helping towards natural immunity within the population). The end result is reduced strain on hospitals and systems that would allow for other non-COVID illnesses to receive care.Entities:
Keywords: Ambulatory treatment; Anti-infective; Anti-inflammatory; Anticoagulant; Antiplatelet agent; Antiviral; COVID-19; Corticosteroid; Elderly; Hospitalization; Mortality; Nursing home; SARS-CoV-2
Year: 2021 PMID: 34130113 PMCID: PMC8178530 DOI: 10.1016/j.mehy.2021.110622
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Hypotheses ISSN: 0306-9877 Impact factor: 1.538
Reports of early prehospital sequenced multi-drug treatment (SMDT) in nursing home residents.
| First author’s surname | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Bernabeu-Wittel | HCQ/HCQ + lopinavir/ritonavir/HCQ + AZM | Survival in active treatment group independently associated with use of any antiviral treatment; survival in the antiviral treatment group was independently associated with receiving any of the antiviral treatments (OR = 28 [5–160]). |
| Heras | HCQ/HCQ + AZM | HCQ + AZ correlated significantly with decreased mortality, HCQ alone also correlated but not significantly; 83 received pharmacological treatment, total survival was 76%, 7 (8%) patients were hospitalized, of which 4 died. |
| De Spiegeleer | Effect of medication for preexisting conditions: Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEi), angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs), or HMB-CoA reductase inhibitors (statins) | Statins significantly correlated with decreased mortality, ACEi and ARBs also correlated but not significantly; a statistically significant relationship between statin intake and the absence of symptoms during COVID-19 (OR 2.91; 95% CI 1.27 to 6.71). |
| Brouns | Effect of medication for preexisting conditions: Oral antithrombotic therapy (vitamin K antagonists, direct oral anticoagulants, anti-platelet therapy) | Association of antithrombotics with diminished mortality but not significant and further reduced when controlled for age, sex, hypertension, and comorbidity; univariate analysis (OR 0.89, 95% CI 0.41 to 1.95, p = 0.776). |
| Ahmad | HCQ + DOXY | Smaller percentage of deaths and hospitalizations compared to a demographically similar nursing home where residents were not treated; of 54, 9 did not complete treatment, and those completing the course of treatment were afebrile by at least 5 days after completion, and either had no more shortness of breath or had returned to previous oxygenation levels (for patients who had been on ventilation before contracting COVID-19). |
| Ly | HCQ + AZM | Treated residents had significantly lower mortality. The overall mortality was 20.8%, and hospitalization including ICU admission was 20.8%. Mortality was lower in patients treated with HQC + AZM for at least 3 days (15.5%) than in those not so treated (26.4%), OR 0.37, p = 0.02. |
| Alam | DOXY + standard of care | Researchers concluded that early treatment with DOXY for high-risk patients with moderate to severe COVID-19 infections in non-hospital settings, such as LTCFs, is associated with early clinical recovery, decreased hospitalization, and decreased mortality; 85% of patients (n = 76) revealed clinical recovery, 3% hospitalized |
| Cangiano | HCQ/heparin/corticosteroid/anti-platelet | Mortality was significantly lower for patients who had previously been on chronic vitamin D supplementation, and was significantly reduced by COVID-19 treatment with HCQ (p = 0.03, 28 survived vs 5 who died). |
| Leriger | HCQ/non-HCQ | After 2 weeks, 76 (72%) of residents receiving HCQ showed no symptoms, while 9% had symptoms, 2% continued in hospitalized, and 17% had died; control group had 58% (66) who were asymptomatic, 13% who had mild symptoms, 1% with moderate symptoms, 3% hospitalized, and 25% had died; the benefits of HCQ treatment in positive nursing home residents seem to outweigh the harms in terms of symptom severity and mortality, and particularly so in residents over 80 years of age and when HCQ was administered before symptoms began (started early). |
Fig. 1Relative risk reduction in mortality risk in nursing home COVID patients using early prehospital combined and sequenced multi-drug treatment (SMDT).