| Literature DB >> 34216117 |
Manoj Kumar Reddy Somagutta1,2, Maria Kezia Lourdes Pormento1, Pousette Hamid3, Alaa Hamdan1, Muhammad Adnan Khan1, Rockeven Desir1, Rupalakshmi Vijayan1, Saloni Shirke1, Rishan Jeyakumar1, Zeryab Dogar1, Sarabjot Singh Makkar1, Prathima Guntipalli1, Ngaba Neguemadji Ngardig1, Manasa Sindhura Nagineni1, Trissa Paul1, Enkhmaa Luvsannyam1, Chala Riddick1, Marcos A Sanchez-Gonzalez1.
Abstract
This study aims to assess anakinra's safety and efficacy for treating severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Numerous electronic databases were searched and finally 15 studies with a total of 3,530 patients, 757 in the anakinra arm, 1,685 in the control arm were included. The pooled adjusted odds ratio (OR) for mortality in the treatment arm was 0.34 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.21 - 0.54, I² = 48%), indicating a significant association between anakinra and mortality. A significant association was found regarding mechanical ventilation requirements in anakinra group compared to the control group OR, 0.68 (95% CI, 0.49 - 0.95, I² = 50%). For the safety of anakinra, we evaluated thromboembolism risk and liver transaminases elevation. Thromboembolism risk was OR, 1.59 (95% CI, 0.65 - 3.91, I² = 0%) and elevation in liver transaminases with OR was 1.35 (95% CI, 0.61 - 3.03, I² = 76%). Both were not statistically significant over the control group. Anakinra is beneficial in lowering mortality in COVID-19 patients. However, these non-significant differences in the safety profile between the anakinra and control groups may have been the result of baseline characteristics of the intervention group, and further studies are essential in evaluating anakinra's safety profile.Entities:
Keywords: Anakinra; COVID-19; IL-1 antagonist; Kineret; SARS-CoV-2
Year: 2021 PMID: 34216117 PMCID: PMC8258297 DOI: 10.3947/ic.2021.0016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Chemother ISSN: 1598-8112
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram summarizing the literature search for included articles.
PRISMA, preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses.
Study characteristics of cohort studies and case series
| Study | Authors | Study design | Country | Total sample | Mean age of treatment group | Severity of patients at admission | Intervention | Control | Dosage and Administration | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anakinra for severe forms of COVID-19: a cohort study | Huet et al. [ | Cohort | France | 96 | 71 | Severe COVID-19 related bilateral pneumonia, bilateral lung infiltrates, oxygen saturation 93% or less under 6 L/min of oxygen | Anakinra | Standard of care: oral hydroxychloroquine 600 mg/day, oral azithromycin 250 mg/day and parenteral beta-lactam antibiotics (ceftriaxone or amoxicillin (n = 44) | 100 mg BID for 72 hours followed by 100 mg OD for 7 days | Primary: need for ICU admission with MV or death; Secondary: death, need for MV, difference in O2 requirements, and change in CRP concentration |
| Early IL-1 receptor blockade in severe inflammatory respiratory failure complicating COVID-19 | Cauchois et al. [ | Cohort | France | 22 | 61 | Patients presented with severe hypoxia requiring oxygen therapy between 5th to 13th day from diagnosis | Anakinra | Ritorinavir/Lopinavir/Hydroxychloroquine | Infused IV over 2 hours, OD 300 mg for 5 days, then tapered to 200 mg for 2 days, and then 100 mg for 1 day. | Mortality, oxygen requirements and days without invasive mechanical ventilation |
| Effect of anakinra versus usual care in adults in hospital with COVID-19 and mild-to-moderate pneumonia (CORIMUNO-ANA-1): a randomized controlled trial | CORIMUNO-19 collaborative group [ | Randomized controlled trial | France | 114 | 67 | Confirmed COVID-19 with mild-to-moderate, severe or critical pneumonia, C-reactive protein serum >25 mg | Anakinra | Antibiotic drugs, antiviral drugs, corticosteroids, vasopressor support, anticoagulants | 200 mg BID on days 1 - 3 then 100 mg BID on day 4 and 100 mg OD on day 5 | Mortality and need for non-invasive or mechanical ventilation by day 4 |
| Interleukin-1blockade with high-dose anakinra in patients with COVID-19, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and hyperinflammation: a retrospective cohort study | Cavalli et al. [ | Cohort | Italy | 45 | 63 | Moderate to severe ARDS and hyperinflammation (CRP >100 mg/L, ferritin >900 ng/mL), bilateral infiltrates on chest radiograph, hypoxemia | Anakinra | Standard treatment respiratory support by non-invasive ventilation with CPAP, 200 mg hydroxychloroquine BID, 400 mg lopinavir with 100 mg ritonavir BID (n = 16) | 10 mg/kg per day | Survival, mechanical ventilation-free survival, and changes in PaO2:FiO2, CRP and clinical status |
| Anakinra combined with methylprednisolone in patients with severe COVID-19 pneumonia and hyperinflammation: An observational cohort study | Bozzi et al. [ | Cohort | Italy | 120 | 62 | Ferritin >1,000 ng/mL and/or C-reactive protein >10 mg/dL and respiratory failure | Anakinra + methylprednisolone | High dose | Untreated | Mortality, blood stream infections and laboratory alterations |
| Comparative Survival Analysis of Immunomodulatory Therapy for COVID-19 'Cytokine Storm': A Retrospective Observational Cohort Study | Narain et al. [ | Retrospective observational cohort | US | 3,098 | 65.3 | Cytokine storm (ferritin >700 ng/mL, CRP >30 mg/dL, LDH >300 U/L) | Anakinra (n = 37), Anakinra + steroids (n = 468) | Standard of care: no immunomodulatory treatment (n = 1,505) | 100 mg QID subcutaneously for 3 days then tapered | Hospital mortality |
| Use of anakinra to prevent mechanical ventilation in severe COVID-19: A case series | Navarro-Milan et al. [ | Case series | US | 11 | 60.45 | Fever, ferritin >1,000 ng/mL, AHRF | Anakinra | N/A | 200 mg IV then 100 mg subcutaneously QID then 100 mg subcutaneously | Decreased acute hypoxic respiratory failure and prevents mechanical ventilation in patients of COVID-19 |
| Favorable Anakinra Responses in Severe Covid-19 Patients with Secondary Hemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis | Dimopolous et al. [ | Case series | Greece and Netherlands | 8 | 67.25 | HScore >169, diffuse lung infiltrates, pO2/FiO2 <100, one patient had acute kidney injury | Anakinra | N/A | All male patients received 200 mg TID for 7 days while female patient had 300 mg | Treatment of COVID-19 patients with sHL |
| Interleukin-1 blockade with anakinra in acute leukaemia patients with severe COVID-19 pneumonia appears safe and may result in clinical improvement | Day et al. [ | Case series | UK | 3 | 35.67 | Patient 1-case of AML, parenchymal ground glass infiltrates in the right upper lobe, increased oxygen requirement. Patient 2-case of AML, bilateral opacification of airspaces and pyrexia after starting chemotherapy. Patient 3-case of ALL, collapse and fever after 5 days of 2nd chemotherapy, lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia. | Anakinra | N/A | 2 patients 100 mg TID subcutaneously and 1 patient 200 mg BID IV | Anakinra caused clinical improvement in patients with acute leukemia and hyperinflammation |
| Targeting the inflammatory cascade with anakinra in moderate to severe COVID-19 pneumonia: case series | Aouba et al. [ | Case series | France | 8 | 60 | COVID-19 pneumonia, CRP ≥50 mg/L | Anakinra | N/A | 100 mg BID | Blockage of cytokine storm and reduction in CRP |
| Safety and efficacy of early high-dose IV anakinra in severe COVID-19 lung disease | Pontali et al. [ | Case series | Italy | 5 | 54.4 | Dyspnea associated with fever, systemic inflammation, respiratory distress, lung abnormalities on chest CT | Anakinra | N/A | 100 mg TID | Rapid resolution of systemic inflammation |
COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019; BID, twice daily; OD, once a day; ICU, intensive care unit; MV, mechanical ventilation; CRP, C-reactive protein; IL, interleukin; IV, intravenously; CORIMUNO-ANA-1, corimuno anakinra; ANA, antinuclear antibodies; CPAP, continuous positive airway pressure; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; QID, four times a day; AHRF, acute hypercapnic respiratory failure; N/A, not associated; TID, three times a day; sHL; secondary hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis; AML, acute myelogenous leukemia; ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; CT, computed tomography.
Figure 2Funnel plot showing no publication bias and high precision among studies.
The X-axis shows the drug's measured average effect and Y-axis shows standard error.
OR, odds ratio; SE, standard error.
Figure 3Summarizing the risk of bias assessment for the included studies using Cochrane Risk Bias Assessment tool.
Figure 4Forest plot estimates of OR and 95% CI of the primary outcome of mortality rate between anakinra cohort studies and RCT. Summary measure reveals a statistically significant superiority in the experimental group compared to the control group P <0.000 with evidence of moderate heterogeneity I2 = 48%.
OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; RCT, randomized clinical trial.
Figure 5Forest plot estimates of OR and 95% CI for the association of need for invasive mechanical ventilation and anakinra. Summary measure reveals a statistically significant superiority in the experimental group compared to the control (P = 0.02), with evidence of moderate heterogeneity I2 =50%.
OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval.
Figure 6The forest plot depicts the estimated odds ratio and 95% CI of thromboembolic events between experimental and control groups. Summary measure reveals no statistical difference between control and experimental populations (P = 0.31), with no heterogeneity at all between pooled studies I2 =0%.
CI, confidence interval.
Figure 7The forest plot depicts individual and pooled estimates of odds ratios and 95% CI of increases in liver transaminases between experimental and control groups. The summary measure shows no statistical difference between experimental and control groups, (P = 0.46), with high heterogeneity presence between pooled studies I2 = 76%.
CI, confidence interval.