| Literature DB >> 35943669 |
Xabier García-Albéniz1,2, Julia Del Amo3, Rosa Polo3, José Miguel Morales-Asencio4, Miguel A Hernán5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recruitment into randomized trials of hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) for prevention of COVID-19 has been adversely affected by a widespread conviction that HCQ is not effective for prevention. In the absence of an updated systematic review, we conducted a meta-analysis of randomized trials that study the effectiveness of HCQ to prevent COVID-19.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35943669 PMCID: PMC9360718 DOI: 10.1007/s10654-022-00891-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Epidemiol ISSN: 0393-2990 Impact factor: 12.434
Summary of randomized trials studying hydroxychloroquine as prophylaxis for COVID-19
| Trial | Publication date | Sample size | HCQ dose | Primary Outcome Definition | Effect estimate | Percentage of patients fully adherent to treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Rajasingham et al. (19) | September 2020* | 494 HCQ (arm 1) 495 HCQ (arm 2) 494 Placebo | Arm 1: 400 mg loading dose twice, then 400 mg once weekly for 12 weeks Arm 2: 400 mg loading dose twice, then 400 mg twice weekly for 12 weeks | PCR-confirmeda COVID-19 or probable compatible illness | HR: 0.73 (0.48, 1.09), both HCQ arms combined | Not reportedb |
| Abella et al. (20) | September 2020 | 66 HCQ 66 Placebo | 600 mg daily for 56 days | PCR-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection, regardless of symptoms | RD: -0.3 (-8.9, 8.3) cases per 100 | 97% HCQ 98% placebo |
| Seet et al. (21) | April 2021 | 432 HCQ 619 ascorbic acid | 400 mg loading dose, then 200 mg daily for 42 days | PCR-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection, regardless of symptoms | RR: 0.70 (0.44, 0.97)c | 71.4% HCQd 80.0% ascorbic acidd |
| Rojas-Serrano et al. (25) | May 2021* | 62 HCQ 65 Placebo | 200 mg daily for 60 days | PCR-confirmed symptomatic COVID-19 | HR: 0.18 (0.21, 1.59) | Not reportede |
| Syed et al. (22) | May 2021* | 48 HCQ arm 1 51 HCQ arm 2 55 HCQ arm 3 46 Placebo | Arm 1: 400 mg loading dose twice on day 1, then 400 mg weekly for 12 weeks Arm 2: 400 mg once every 3 weeks Arm 3: 200 mg once every 3 weeks | Unclear: “COVID-19-free survival” | Not reported Calculated RRg: 0.70 (0.19, 2.59) | Not reported |
| Naggie et al. (23) | August 2021* | 683 HCQ 676 Placebo | 600 mg loading dose twice on day 1, then 400 mg daily for 29 days | Symptomatic COVID-19, PCR-confirmed or not | RD: -1.98 (-4.6, 0.9) cases per 100 | 94.4% HCQf 95.7% placebof |
| Grau-Pujol et al.h**. (17) | November 2021 | 142 HCQ 127 Placebo | 400 mg daily x 4, then 400 mg weekly for 30 daysi | Laboratory-confirmed (seroconversion or positive PCR) symptomatic COVID-19 | Not reportedj | 98% HCQ 97% Placebo |
| Polo et al. (24) | March 2022 | 231 HCQ 223 Placebo | 200 mg daily for 12 weeks | PCR-confirmed symptomatic COVID-19 | RR: 0.49 (0.00, 2.29) | 85% HCQ 86% placebo |
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| Boulware et al. (4) | June 2020 | 414 HCQ 407 Placebo | 800 mg on day 1, then 600 mg daily days 1–5 | Symptomatic COVID-19, PCR-confirmeda or not, by day 14 | RD: -2.4 (-7.0, 2.2) cases per 100 | 75.4% HCQ 82.6% placebo |
| Mitja et al. (5) | July 2020* | 1225 HCQ 1300 Usual care | 800 mg day 1, then 400 mg daily days 1–6 | PCR-confirmed, symptomatic COVID-19 by day 14 | RRk: 0.68 (0.34, 1.34) | 95.1% HCQ 97.5% usual care |
| Barnabas et al. (26) | December 2020 | 353 HCQ 336 ascorbic acid | 400 mg daily for 3 days, then 200 mg daily for 11 days | PRC-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection, regardless of symptoms | HR: 1.10 (0.73, 1.66) | 88.0% HCQf,,l 87% ascorbic acidf,l |
| Liu et al** (18) | May 2021 | 32 HCQ 19 Observation | 200 mg twice a day for 10 days | PCR-confirmed symptomatic COVID-19 by day 14 | There were no incident outcomes | Not reported |
| McKinnon et al. (27)m | March 2022 | 199 HCQ arm 1 188 HCQ arm 2 191 Placebo | Arm 1: 400 mg weekly for 8 weeks Arm 2: 400 mg loading dose, then 200 mg daily | PCR- or IgM/IgG serology-confirmed symptomatic COVID-19 | Not reported Calculated RR: 0.99 (0.09, 10.82) | Not reported |
* Date of posting to MedRxiv
** Not included in meta-analysis
a The result of the PCR was self-reported
b Overall adherence was not provided. Week-specific adherence ranged from 73–93% in the placebo group, from 76–93% in the HCQ Arm 1 and from 69–93% in the HCQ Arm 2, but a non-adherent participant during the first week can be counted as adherent in subsequent weeks
c 98.75% confidence interval
d Percentage of patients reporting > 70% adherence to trial intervention
e 39% of patients were lost to follow-up. Among those who were not, 36.4% reported missing at least one daily dose
f Adherence was self-reported
g Risk ratio calculated for positive PCR at 12 weeks. The three HCQ groups were aggregated. Patients without a PCR test (4 in the HCQ groups, 1 in the control group) were assumed to have a negative PCR
h Labelled as “pre-exposure prophylaxis” study, but 25.7% of participants were in “close contact with a confirmed COVID-19 case without using personal protective equipment” in the 20 days before screening
iTreatment was planned for 6 months, but the study was halted after a month because of futility
j There were no cases in the HCQ group and one case in the placebo group
k Among participants who were PCR-negative at baseline
l Percentage of patients receiving any dose
m The authors do not label the study as post-exposure prophylaxis, but report that “60% [of study participants] reported contact with a COVID-19 positive patient before study entry
HCQ: hydroxychloroquine; RR: risk ratio; RD: risk difference; HR: hazard ratio
Fig. 1Risk ratio estimates of COVID-19 for hydroxychloroquine vs. no hydroxychloroquine in randomized trials of pre-exposure prophylaxis, pooled and by study. These estimates are based on the definition of COVID-19 reported in the primary analysis of each study
Fig. 2Risk ratio estimates of COVID-19 for hydroxychloroquine vs. no hydroxychloroquine in randomized trials of post-exposure prophylaxis, pooled and by study. These estimates are based on the definition of COVID-19 reported in the primary analysis of each study
Fig. 3Cumulative estimate of the pooled risk ratio of COVID-19 for hydroxychloroquine vs. no hydroxychloroquine in randomized trials of pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis. Confidence intervals are computed using the standard random effects method