| Literature DB >> 35832701 |
Adrian V Hernandez1,2, John Ingemi1, Michael Sherman1, Vinay Pasupuleti3, Joshuan J Barboza2, Alejandro Piscoya2, Yuani M Roman1, C Michael White1.
Abstract
Introduction: No early treatment intervention for COVID-19 has proven effective to date. We systematically reviewed the efficacy of hydroxychloroquine as early treatment for COVID-19. Material and methods: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) evaluating hydroxychloroquine for early treatment of COVID-19 were searched in five engines and preprint websites until September 14, 2021. Primary outcomes were hospitalization and all-cause mortality. Secondary outcomes included COVID-19 symptom resolution, viral clearance, and adverse events. Inverse variance random-effects meta-analyses were performed and quality of evidence (QoE) per outcome was assessed with GRADE methods.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; early treatment; efficacy; hydroxychloroquine; safety
Year: 2021 PMID: 35832701 PMCID: PMC9266791 DOI: 10.5114/aoms/143147
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Med Sci ISSN: 1734-1922 Impact factor: 3.707
Baseline characteristics of randomized controlled studies included in the systematic review
| Author, year [ref.]/type of study/registration | Objective | Sample, country | Population | Overall key patient characteristics | Intervention | Comparison | Outcomes | Follow-up time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mitjà | To determine whether early treatment with HCQ would be more efficacious than no treatment for outpatients with mild COVID-19 | 293 (I: 136, C: 157), Spain | Adult (≥ 18 years) patients who had mild symptoms of COVID-19 (i.e., fever, acute cough, shortness of breath, sudden olfactory or gustatory loss, or influenza-like-illness) for < 5 days before enrollment, were non-hospitalized, and had a positive PCR test for SARS-CoV-2 in the baseline NP swab | Mean (SD) age: 41.6 (12.6) years | HCQ 800 mg on day 1, followed by 400 mg once daily for 6 days (3,200 mg total dose). Initially, the protocol used HCQ plus cobicistat-boosted darunavir (DRVc) combined treatment, but it was adapted to HCQ alone | Usual care (no details provided) | Primary: Viral RNA load in NP swabs at days 3, and 7 after treatment start | 28 days |
| Skipper | To investigate whether HCQ could reduce COVID-19 severity in adult outpatients | 491 (I: 212, C: 211), USA and Canada | Non-hospitalized adults (≥ 18 years) with ≤ 4 days of symptoms and either PCR-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection or symptoms after a high-risk exposure to a PCR-confirmed COVID-19 person within the past 14 days. HCW who had COVID-19 symptoms and high-risk exposure but whose contact had PCR results pending. Participants with a high-risk exposure and asymptomatic at the time of consent of accompanying prophylaxis RCT; these became symptomatic before day 1 | Median (IQR) age: 40 (32–50) years | HCQ 800 mg (4 tablets) once, then 600 mg 6 to 8 h later, then 600 mg once daily for 4 more days (5 days in total) (3,800 mg total dose) | Placebo tablets of folic acid (400 μg) prescribed as an identical regimen | Original primary: Ordinal outcome by day 14 of not hospitalized, hospitalized, or ICU stay or death. Modified primary: Change in overall symptom severity over 14 days measured on a 10-point VAS | 14 days |
| Johnston | To evaluate the efficacy of HCQ and HCQ+AZ to prevent progression of COVID-19 among high- and low-risk outpatients with COVID-19 | 231 (HCQ:71, HCQ + AZ: 77, P: 83), USA | Age between 18 and 80 years, lab-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection within the prior 72 h. High-risk group: established risk factors for severe COVID-19 (age ≥ 60, pulmonary disease, DM, HTN, BMI ≥ 30). Low risk group: did not meet any high-risk criteria | Median (min.–max.) age: 37 (18-78) years | HCQ 400 mg day 1, then 200 mg twice daily for 9 days (4,000 mg total dose) | Placebo-equivalent (ascorbic acid (500 mg day 1, 250 mg twice daily for 9 days) + folic acid (800 μg day 1, 400 μg twice daily for 4 days)) | Primary: Composite of 14-day development of LRTI (SpO2 < 93% on two readings with symptoms), 28-day COVID-19 related hospitalization or death; 14-day time to viral clearance | 28 days |
| Reis | To determine whether HCQ or L/R reduces hospitalization among high-risk patients with early symptomatic COVID-19 in an outpatient setting | 685 (HCQ: 214, L/R: 244, P: 227), Brazil | 18 years or older, reported < 8 days since onset of flulike symptoms or chest CT scan consistent with COVID-19, lab-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection, and at least one criterion for high risk: ≥ 50 years, pulmonary disease (moderate or severe asthma, COPD, pulmonary HTN, or emphysema), DM, HTN, known CVD, BMI ≥ 30, immunocompromised status, cancer | Median (IQR) age: 53 (18–94) years | HCQ 800 mg day 1, then 400 mg for 9 days (4,400 mg total dose) | Placebo (inert material – talc); bottles were identical to HCQ or L/R | Primary: COVID-associated hospitalization; death. Both measured at 90 days | 90 days |
| Schwartz | To determine whether HCQ treatment for outpatients with SARS-CoV-2 infection could prevent hospitalization, mechanical ventilation or death | 148 (HCQ: 111, P: 37), Canada | Adults with SARS-CoV-2 infection confirmed by RT-PCR from a NP or pharyngeal swab within the previous 4 days, with symptom onset within the previous 12 days, and with ≥ 1 risk factor for severe disease (receiving immunosuppressants or biologic therapies, age ≥ 40, BMI > 40, chronic lung disease, HTN, DM, CVD, CKD, cancer, transplant recipient, severe immune suppression, smoking) | Mean (SD) age: 46.8 (11.3) years | HCQ 800 mg day 1, then 200 mg twice daily for 4 days (1,600 mg total dose) | Matching placebo (12 tablets over 5 days) | Primary: Severe disease (composite of hospitalization, invasive mechanical ventilation or death within 30 days) | 30 days |
COVID-19 – coronavirus disease 2019, I – intervention, C – comparator, P – placebo, HCQ – hydroxychloroquine, AZ – azithromycin, L/R – lopinavir/ritonavir, NP – nasopharyngeal, CT – computed tomography, HCW – health care worker, RT-PCR – reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, ICU – intensive care unit, VAS – visual analogue scale, SC – standard of care, NA – not available; min. – minimum, max. – maximum, DM – diabetes mellitus, HTN – hypertension, COPD – chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases, CVD – cardiovascular diseases, CKD – chronic kidney disease, BMI – body mass index, LRTI – lower respiratory tract infection.
Figure 1Effect of early treatment with hydroxychloroquine on hospitalization
Figure 2Effect of early treatment with hydroxychloroquine on all-cause mortality
Figure 3Effect of early treatment with hydroxychloroquine on adverse events
Summary of findings table for the effects of early treatment with hydroxychloroquine vs. control in COVID-19 patients
| Outcomes | Anticipated absolute effects* (95% CI) | Relative effect (95% CI) | No. of participants (studies) | Certainty of the evidence (GRADE) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk with control | Risk with hydroxychloroquine | ||||
| Hospitalization follow-up: range 14 days to 90 days | 5 per 100 | 4 per 100 (2 to 6) | RR = 0.80 (0.47 to 1.36) | 1458 (5 RCTs) | ⊕⊕○○ Low |
| All-cause mortality follow-up: range 14 days to 90 days | 0 per 100 | 0 per 100 (0 to 1) | RR = 0.77 (0.16 to 3.68) | 1431 (5 RCTs) | ⊕○○○ Very low[ |
| COVID-19 symptom resolution follow-up: range 14 days to 30 days | 67 per 100 | 63 per 100 (51 to 77) | RR = 0.94 (0.77 to 1.16) | 675 (3 RCTs) | ⊕⊕○○ Low[ |
| Time to COVID-19 symptom resolution assessed with: days follow-up: range 28 days to 30 days | The mean time to COVID-19 symptom resolution was 12.7 days | MD 0.16 days lower (4.56 lower to 4.25 higher) | – | 417 (2 RCTs) | ⊕○○○ Very low[ |
| Viral clearance assessed with: RT-PCR from nasopharyngeal swab follow-up: mean 14 days | 62 per 100 | 63 per 100 (50 to 78) | RR = 1.02 (0.82 to 1.27) | 481 (2 RCTs) | ⊕⊕○○ Low[ |
| Adverse events follow-up: range 14 days to 28 days | 15 per 100 | 33 per 100 (13 to 83) | RR = 2.17 (0.86 to 5.45) | 1495 (5 RCTs) | ⊕○○○ Very low[ |
Very serious risk of bias due to high risk of bias in Skipper 2020 due to missing outcome data, and some concerns of bias in Mitja 2020 due to deviations from intended interventions and selection of the reported results and in Reis 2021 due to bias in the randomization process.
Serious imprecision as 95%CI of RR was 0.16 to 3.68.
Serious risk of bias due to high risk of bias in Skipper 2020 due to missing outcome data.
Serious heterogeneity of effects across trials as I2 = 71%.
Serious risk of bias due to some concerns of bias in Mitja 2020 due to deviations from intended interventions and selection of the reported results.
Very serious heterogeneity of effects across trials as I2 = 80%.
Serious imprecision as 95% CI of MD was –4.56 to 4.25 days.
Serious risk of bias due to some concerns of bias of the randomization process in Reis 2021.
Serious heterogeneity of effects between trials as I2 = 65%.
Very serious heterogeneity of effects across trials as I2 = 92%.
Serious imprecision as 95%CI of RR was 0.86 to 5.45.