| Literature DB >> 34757439 |
Anders Granholm1,2, Marie Warrer Munch3,4, Sheila Nainan Myatra5, Bharath Kumar Tirupakuzhi Vijayaraghavan6,7,8, Maria Cronhjort9, Rebecka Rubenson Wahlin9, Stephan M Jakob10, Luca Cioccari10, Maj-Brit Nørregaard Kjær3,4, Gitte Kingo Vesterlund3,4, Tine Sylvest Meyhoff3,4, Marie Helleberg11, Morten Hylander Møller3,4, Thomas Benfield12, Balasubramanian Venkatesh13, Naomi E Hammond13,14, Sharon Micallef13, Abhinav Bassi8, Oommen John8,15, Vivekanand Jha8,15,16, Klaus Tjelle Kristiansen17, Charlotte Suppli Ulrik18, Vibeke Lind Jørgensen19, Margit Smitt20, Morten H Bestle21,22, Anne Sofie Andreasen23, Lone Musaeus Poulsen24, Bodil Steen Rasmussen4,25, Anne Craveiro Brøchner4,26, Thomas Strøm27,28, Anders Møller29, Mohd Saif Khan30, Ajay Padmanaban6, Jigeeshu Vasishtha Divatia5, Sanjith Saseedharan31, Kapil Borawake32, Farhad Kapadia33, Subhal Dixit34, Rajesh Chawla35, Urvi Shukla36, Pravin Amin37, Michelle S Chew38, Christian Aage Wamberg39, Christian Gluud40,41, Theis Lange42, Anders Perner3,4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: We compared dexamethasone 12 versus 6 mg daily for up to 10 days in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and severe hypoxaemia in the international, randomised, blinded COVID STEROID 2 trial. In the primary, conventional analyses, the predefined statistical significance thresholds were not reached. We conducted a pre-planned Bayesian analysis to facilitate probabilistic interpretation.Entities:
Keywords: Bayesian analysis; COVID-19; Corticosteroids; Critical illness; Hypoxaemia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34757439 PMCID: PMC8579417 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-021-06573-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Data on baseline variables, stratification variables, and outcomes
| Variable | Dexamethasone 12 mg | Dexamethasone 6 mg |
|---|---|---|
| Country | ||
| Denmark | 251 (50.5%) | 234 (48.2%) |
| Indiaa | 182 (36.6%) | 187 (38.6%) |
| Sweden | 40 (8%) | 39 (8%) |
| Switzerland | 24 (4.8%) | 25 (5.2%) |
| Age, years | 65 (56–74) | 64 (54–72) |
| Age below 70 years | 330 (66.4%) | 318 (65.6%) |
| Invasive mechanical ventilation at baseline | 107 (21.5%) | 99 (20.4%) |
| Days alive without life support at day 28 | 22 (6–28) | 20.5 (4–28) |
| Mortality at day 28 | 133 (27.1%) | 155 (32.3%) |
| One or more serious adverse reactions at day 28 | 56 (11.3%) | 65 (13.4%) |
| Mortality at day 90 | 157 (32%) | 180 (37.7%) |
| Days alive without life support at day 90 | 84 (9.2–90) | 80 (6–90) |
| Days alive and out of hospital at day 90 | 61.5 (0–78) | 48 (0–76) |
Categorical variables are presented as numbers (percentages) and numerical variables are presented as medians (interquartile ranges). Additional baseline and outcome data are presented in the primary trial publication [7], and data for the sensitivity analyses (best/worst-worst/best case of the primary outcome and assignment of 0 days to non-survivors for all outcomes) are presented in Table S1 in the electronic supplementary material (ESM)
aIndividual sites are not listed, but the site enrolling most patients was in India
bData for days alive without life support and mortality at day 28 were missing in 11 patients (6 patients in the dexamethasone 12 mg group and 5 patients in the dexamethasone 6 mg group). Data for serious adverse reactions at day 28 were analysed for all available days only, and thus there is no missing data for this outcome. Data for days mortality and days alive and out of hospital at day 90 were missing in 14 patients (7 in each group). Data for days alive without life support at day 90 were missing in 15 patients (7 patients in the dexamethasone 12 mg group and 8 patients in the dexamethasone 6 mg group). No data were missing for the other variables presented in this table
Average treatment effect estimates and probabilities of effects
| Outcome | Effect estimates | Probability of effects with 12 mg dexamethasone | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dexamethasone 12 mg | Dexamethasone 6 mg | Relative difference | Absolute difference | Any benefit | Any harm | Clinically important benefit | Clinically important harm | No clinically important difference | |
| Days alive without life support at day 28 | Mean: 17.8 (16.7–19) days | Mean: 16.5 (15.4–17.6) days | IRR: 1.08 (0.98–1.18) | MD: 1.3 (−0.3 to 2.9) days | 94.2% | 5.8% | 63.9% | 0.3% | 35.9% |
| Serious adverse reactions at day 28 | Prob.: 11.4% (8.9–14.1%) | Prob.: 13.3% (10.7–16.2%) | RR: 0.85 (0.63–1.16) | RD: −1.9% (−5.7 to 1.9%) | 84.1% | 15.9% | 48.4% | 2.1% | 49.5% |
| Mortality at day 28 | Prob.: 27.5% (24–31.2%) | Prob.: 31.8% (28.1–35.6%) | RR: 0.87 (0.73–1.03) | RD: −4.3% (−9.4 to 0.9%) | 94.8% | 5.2% | 80.7% | 0.9% | 18.5% |
| Mortality at day 90 | Prob.: 32.5% (28.8–36.3%) | Prob.: 37.1% (33.2–41.0%) | RR: 0.88 (0.75–1.02) | RD: −4.6% (−10 to 0.9%) | 95.1% | 4.9% | 82.3% | 0.8% | 16.9% |
| Days alive without life support at day 90 | Mean: 59.3 (54.6–64.2) days | Mean: 55.7 (51.1–60.6) days | IRR: 1.06 (0.95–1.2) | MD: 3.6 (−3.1 to 10.2) days | 85% | 15% | 77.2% | 9.2% | 13.6% |
| Days alive and out of hospital at day 90 | Mean: 44.1 (40.9–47.3) days | Mean: 40.2 (37–43.5) days | IRR: 1.10 (0.99–1.22) | MD: 3.9 (−0.6 to 8.4) days | 95.7% | 4.3% | 89.7% | 1.5% | 8.8% |
| Days alive without life support at day 28 | Mean: 17.8 (16.7–18.9) days | Mean: 16.5 (15.5–17.6) days | IRR: 1.07 (0.99–1.17) | MD: 1.2 (−0.2 to 2.7) days | 94.9% | 5.1% | 61.8% | 0.2% | 38% |
| Serious adverse reactions at day 28 | Prob.: 12% (9.9–14.3%) | Prob.: 12.7% (10.5–15.1%) | RR: 0.95 (0.79–1.14) | RD: −0.7% (−3 to 1.6%) | 72.3% | 27.7% | 13.2% | 1% | 85.8% |
| Mortality at day 28 | Prob.: 28.6% (25.5% to 31.8%) | Prob.: 30.7% (27.6% to 34%) | RR: 0.93 (0.82–1.05) | RD: −2.1% (−5.7 to 1.5%) | 87.2% | 12.8% | 52.3% | 1.2% | 46.4% |
| Mortality at day 90 | Prob.: 33.6% (30.3–37%) | Prob.: 36% (32.6–39.4%) | RR: 0.93 (0.83–1.05) | RD: −2.4% (−6.3 to 1.5%) | 88.3% | 11.7% | 57.3% | 1.4% | 41.3% |
| Days alive without life support at day 90 | Mean: 59 (54.6–63.7) days | Mean: 56 (51.6–60.7) days | IRR: 1.05 (0.95–1.17) | MD: 3 (−3 to 9.1) days | 83.6% | 16.4% | 74.4% | 9.7% | 16% |
| Days alive and out of hospital at day 90 | Mean: 43.1 (40.3–46.1) days | Mean: 41.1 (38.2–44.1) days | IRR: 1.05 (0.96–1.14) | MD: 2 (−1.6 to 5.7) days | 86.2% | 13.8% | 71.1% | 5.1% | 23.8% |
Analyses conducted in all patients with available outcome data (Table 1). All analyses were adjusted for the stratification variables, and effect sizes are presented as average treatment effects as outlined in the methods section, summarised using median posterior values as point estimates and percentile-based 95% credible intervals (CrIs). Data from additional post hoc sensitivity analyses and results estimated for reference patients are presented in Tables S2–S7 in the ESM
Any benefit is the probability of a MD > 0 days (IRR > 1) or a RD < 0 percentage points (RR < 1); any harm is the probability of a MD < 0 days (IRR < 1) or a RD > 0 percentage points (RR > 1); no clinically important difference is the probability of an absolute MD < 1 days or an absolute RD < 2 percentage points; clinically important benefit/harm are probabilities of effect sizes larger than no clinically important difference in either direction. All definitions of clinically important effect sizes were pre-specified in the protocol [10]
ESM electronic supplementary material, IRR incidence rate ratio (> 1 favours 12 mg); MD mean difference (> 0 favours 12 mg), prob. Probability, RD risk difference in percentage points (< 0 favours 12 mg), RR relative risk (< 1 favours 12 mg)
Fig. 1Days alive without life support at day 28. Full posterior probability distributions for the effect of the treatment on the primary outcome (days alive without life support at day 28; primary analysis using weakly informative priors). Left plot displays the relative difference (incidence rate ratio, IRR), while the right plot displays the absolute difference (mean difference, MD) in days. These results are adjusted for all stratification variables and calculated as average treatment effects, as outlined in the methods section. An IRR > 1 or MD > 0 favours 12 mg dexamethasone; an IRR < 1 or MD < 0 favours 6 mg dexamethasone. The upper subplots display the cumulative posterior distributions, corresponding to the probabilities of effect sizes (X-axis) ≤ the values on the left Y-axis and > the values on the right Y-axis. The lower subplots display the entire posterior distributions, with the bold, vertical line indicating the median value (used as the point estimate) and the area highlighted in red indicating the percentile-based 95% credible interval. The vertical black lines represents exactly no difference, and the area highlighted in blue in the absolute effects plots represent effect sizes smaller than the pre-defined minimally clinically important difference of 1 day in either direction [10].
Fig. 2Serious adverse reactions at day 28. Full posterior probability distributions for the effect of the treatment on serious adverse reactions at day 28 (primary analysis using weakly informative priors). Left plot displays the relative difference (relative risk, RR), while the right plot displays the absolute difference (risk difference, RD) in percentage points. These results are adjusted for all stratification variables and calculated as average treatment effects, as outlined in the methods section. An RR < 1 or RD < 0 favours 12 mg dexamethasone; an RR > 1 or RD > 0 favours 6 mg dexamethasone. The upper subplots display the cumulative posterior distributions, corresponding the probabilities of effect sizes (X-axis) ≤ the corresponding values on the left Y-axis and > the corresponding values on the right Y-axis. The lower subplots display the entire posterior distributions, with the bold, vertical line indicating the median value (used as the point estimate) and the area highlighted in red indicating the percentile-based 95% credible interval. The vertical black lines represents exactly no difference, and the area highlighted in blue in the absolute effects plots represent effect sizes smaller than the pre-defined minimally clinically important difference of 2 percentage points in either direction [10].
Fig. 3Mortality at day 28. Full posterior probability distributions for the effect of the treatment on 28-day all-cause mortality (primary analysis using weakly informative priors). Left plot displays the relative difference (relative risk, RR), while the right plot displays the absolute difference (risk difference, RD) in percentage points. These results are adjusted or all stratification variables and calculated as average treatment effects, as outlined in the methods section. An RR < 1 or RD < 0 favours 12 mg dexamethasone; an RR > 1 or RD > 0 favours 6 mg dexamethasone. The upper subplots display the cumulative posterior distributions, corresponding to the probabilities of effect sizes (X-axis) ≤ the values on the left Y-axis and > the values on the right Y-axis. The lower subplots display the entire posterior distributions, with the bold, vertical line indicating the median value (used as the point estimate) and the area highlighted in red indicating the percentile-based 95% credible interval. The vertical black lines represents exactly no difference, and the area highlighted in blue in the absolute effects plots represent effect sizes smaller than the pre-defined minimally clinically important difference of 2 percentage points in either direction [10].
| In this Bayesian analysis of the COVID STEROID 2 trial, we found relatively high posterior probabilities of benefit with dexamethasone 12 mg versus 6 mg in patients with COVID-19 and severe hypoxaemia on all outcomes, including the days alive without life support and mortality at day 28 and 90. We found relatively low probabilities of clinically important harm with 12 mg dexamethasone for all outcomes. |