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新冠康复者血浆或超免疫球蛋白用于新冠肺炎患者:一项实时系统评价

Convalescent plasma or hyperimmune immunoglobulin for people with COVID-19: a living systematic review.

作者信息

Chai Khai Li, Valk Sarah J, Piechotta Vanessa, Kimber Catherine, Monsef Ina, Doree Carolyn, Wood Erica M, Lamikanra Abigail A, Roberts David J, McQuilten Zoe, So-Osman Cynthia, Estcourt Lise J, Skoetz Nicole

机构信息

Transfusion Research Unit, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.

Jon J van Rood Center for Clinical Transfusion Research, Sanquin/Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, Netherlands.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2020 Oct 12;10:CD013600. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013600.pub3.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Convalescent plasma and hyperimmune immunoglobulin may reduce mortality in patients with viral respiratory diseases, and are currently being investigated in trials as potential therapy for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). A thorough understanding of the current body of evidence regarding the benefits and risks is required.  OBJECTIVES: To continually assess, as more evidence becomes available, whether convalescent plasma or hyperimmune immunoglobulin transfusion is effective and safe in treatment of people with COVID-19.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched the World Health Organization (WHO) COVID-19 Global Research Database, MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane COVID-19 Study Register, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention COVID-19 Research Article Database and trial registries to identify completed and ongoing studies on 19 August 2020.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We followed standard Cochrane methodology. We included studies evaluating convalescent plasma or hyperimmune immunoglobulin for people with COVID-19, irrespective of study design, disease severity, age, gender or ethnicity. We excluded studies including populations with other coronavirus diseases (severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) or Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS)) and studies evaluating standard immunoglobulin.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

We followed standard Cochrane methodology. To assess bias in included studies, we used the Cochrane 'Risk of bias' 2.0 tool for randomised controlled trials (RCTs), the Risk of Bias in Non-randomised Studies - of Interventions (ROBINS-I) tool for controlled non-randomised studies of interventions (NRSIs), and the assessment criteria for observational studies, provided by Cochrane Childhood Cancer for non-controlled NRSIs. We rated the certainty of evidence using the GRADE approach for the following outcomes: all-cause mortality at hospital discharge, mortality (time to event), improvement of clinical symptoms (7, 15, and 30 days after transfusion), grade 3 and 4 adverse events (AEs), and serious adverse events (SAEs).

MAIN RESULTS

This is the second living update of our review. We included 19 studies (2 RCTs, 8 controlled NRSIs, 9 non-controlled NRSIs) with 38,160 participants, of whom 36,081 received convalescent plasma. Two completed RCTs are awaiting assessment (published after 19 August 2020). We identified a further 138 ongoing studies evaluating convalescent plasma or hyperimmune immunoglobulin, of which 73 are randomised (3 reported in a study registry as already being completed, but without results). We did not identify any completed studies evaluating hyperimmune immunoglobulin. We did not include data from controlled NRSIs in data synthesis because of critical risk of bias. The overall certainty of evidence was low to very low, due to study limitations and results including both potential benefits and harms.  Effectiveness of convalescent plasma for people with COVID-19  We included results from two RCTs (both stopped early) with 189 participants, of whom 95 received convalescent plasma. Control groups received standard care at time of treatment without convalescent plasma. We are uncertain whether convalescent plasma decreases all-cause mortality at hospital discharge (risk ratio (RR) 0.55, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.22 to 1.34; 1 RCT, 86 participants; low-certainty evidence).  We are uncertain whether convalescent plasma decreases mortality (time to event) (hazard ratio (HR) 0.64, 95% CI 0.33 to 1.25; 2 RCTs, 189 participants; low-certainty evidence). Convalescent plasma may result in little to no difference in improvement of clinical symptoms (i.e. need for respiratory support) at seven days (RR 0.98, 95% CI 0.30 to 3.19; 1 RCT, 103 participants; low-certainty evidence). Convalescent plasma may increase improvement of clinical symptoms at up to 15 days (RR 1.34, 95% CI 0.85 to 2.11; 2 RCTs, 189 participants; low-certainty evidence), and at up to 30 days (RR 1.13, 95% CI 0.88 to 1.43; 2 studies, 188 participants; low-certainty evidence).  No studies reported on quality of life.  Safety of convalescent plasma for people with COVID-19 We included results from two RCTs, eight controlled NRSIs and nine non-controlled NRSIs assessing safety of convalescent plasma. Reporting of safety data and duration of follow-up was variable. The controlled studies reported on AEs and SAEs only in participants receiving convalescent plasma. Some, but not all, studies included death as a SAE.  The studies did not report the grade of AEs. Fourteen studies (566 participants) reported on AEs of possible grade 3 or 4 severity. The majority of these AEs were allergic or respiratory events. We are very uncertain whether convalescent plasma therapy affects the risk of moderate to severe AEs (very low-certainty evidence).  17 studies (35,944 participants) assessed SAEs for 20,622 of its participants. The majority of participants were from one non-controlled NRSI (20,000 participants), which reported on SAEs within the first four hours and within an additional seven days after transfusion. There were 63 deaths, 12 were possibly and one was probably related to transfusion. There were 146 SAEs within four hours and 1136 SAEs within seven days post-transfusion. These were predominantly allergic or respiratory, thrombotic or thromboembolic and cardiac events. We are uncertain whether convalescent plasma therapy results in a clinically relevant increased risk of SAEs (low-certainty evidence).

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We are uncertain whether convalescent plasma is beneficial for people admitted to hospital with COVID-19. There was limited information regarding grade 3 and 4 AEs to determine the effect of convalescent plasma therapy on clinically relevant SAEs. In the absence of a control group, we are unable to assess the relative safety of convalescent plasma therapy.  While major efforts to conduct research on COVID-19 are being made, recruiting the anticipated number of participants into these studies is problematic. The early termination of the first two RCTs investigating convalescent plasma, and the lack of data from 20 studies that have completed or were due to complete at the time of this update illustrate these challenges. Well-designed studies should be prioritised. Moreover, studies should report outcomes in the same way, and should consider the importance of maintaining comparability in terms of co-interventions administered in all study arms.  There are 138 ongoing studies evaluating convalescent plasma and hyperimmune immunoglobulin, of which 73 are RCTs (three already completed). This is the second living update of the review, and we will continue to update this review periodically. Future updates may show different results to those reported here.

摘要

背景

恢复期血浆和高效免疫球蛋白可能降低病毒性呼吸道疾病患者的死亡率,目前正在试验中作为2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的潜在治疗方法进行研究。需要全面了解当前关于其益处和风险的证据。

目的

随着更多证据的出现,持续评估恢复期血浆或高效免疫球蛋白输注治疗COVID-19患者是否有效和安全。

检索方法

我们检索了世界卫生组织(WHO)COVID-19全球研究数据库、MEDLINE、Embase、Cochrane COVID-19研究注册库、疾病控制和预防中心COVID-19研究文章数据库以及试验注册库,以识别截至2020年8月19日已完成和正在进行的研究。

选择标准

我们遵循标准的Cochrane方法。我们纳入了评估COVID-19患者恢复期血浆或高效免疫球蛋白的研究,无论研究设计、疾病严重程度、年龄、性别或种族如何。我们排除了包括患有其他冠状病毒疾病(严重急性呼吸综合征(SARS)或中东呼吸综合征(MERS))人群的研究以及评估标准免疫球蛋白的研究。

数据收集与分析

我们遵循标准的Cochrane方法。为了评估纳入研究中的偏倚,我们对随机对照试验(RCT)使用Cochrane“偏倚风险”2.0工具,对干预性非随机对照研究(NRSI)使用非随机研究的干预偏倚风险(ROBINS-I)工具,以及对非对照NRSI使用Cochrane儿童癌症提供的观察性研究评估标准。我们使用GRADE方法对以下结局的证据确定性进行评级:出院时全因死亡率、死亡率(事件发生时间)、临床症状改善情况(输血后7天、15天和30天)、3级和4级不良事件(AE)以及严重不良事件(SAE)。

主要结果

这是我们综述的第二次实时更新。我们纳入了19项研究(两项RCT、8项对照NRSI、9项非对照NRSI),共38,160名参与者,其中36,081人接受了恢复期血浆治疗。两项已完成的RCT正在等待评估(2020年8月19日之后发表)。我们还识别出另外138项正在进行的评估恢复期血浆或高效免疫球蛋白的研究,其中73项是随机对照试验(3项在研究注册库中报告已完成,但未给出结果)。我们未识别出任何评估高效免疫球蛋白的已完成研究。由于存在严重偏倚风险,我们未将对照NRSI的数据纳入数据合成。由于研究局限性以及结果包括潜在益处和危害,证据的总体确定性为低至极低。

COVID-19患者恢复期血浆的有效性:我们纳入了两项RCT(均提前终止)的结果,共189名参与者,其中95人接受了恢复期血浆治疗。对照组在治疗时接受标准护理,未使用恢复期血浆。我们不确定恢复期血浆是否能降低出院时的全因死亡率(风险比(RR)0.55,95%置信区间(CI)0.22至1.34;1项RCT,86名参与者;低确定性证据)。我们不确定恢复期血浆是否能降低死亡率(事件发生时间)(风险比(HR)0.64,95%CI 0.33至1.25;2项RCT,189名参与者;低确定性证据)。恢复期血浆在7天时可能对临床症状改善(即呼吸支持需求)几乎没有差异(RR 0.98,95%CI 0.30至3.19;1项RCT,103名参与者;低确定性证据)。恢复期血浆可能在长达15天时增加临床症状改善(RR 1.34,95%CI 0.85至2.11;2项RCT,189名参与者;低确定性证据),以及在长达30天时增加临床症状改善(RR 1.13,95%CI 0.88至1.43;2项研究,188名参与者;低确定性证据)。没有研究报告生活质量情况。

COVID-19患者恢复期血浆的安全性:我们纳入了两项RCT、八项对照NRSI和九项非对照NRSI评估恢复期血浆安全性的结果。安全性数据报告和随访时间各不相同。对照研究仅报告了接受恢复期血浆治疗参与者的AE和SAE。一些但并非所有研究将死亡作为SAE。这些研究未报告AE的分级。14项研究(566名参与者)报告了可能为3级或4级严重程度的AE。这些AE大多数是过敏或呼吸事件。我们非常不确定恢复期血浆治疗是否会影响中度至重度AE的风险(极低确定性证据)。17项研究(35,944名参与者)对其20,622名参与者评估了SAE。大多数参与者来自一项非对照NRSI(20,000名参与者),该研究报告了输血后前四小时内以及另外七天内的SAE。有63例死亡,12例可能与输血有关,1例可能与输血有关。输血后四小时内有146例SAE,七天内有1136例SAE。这些主要是过敏或呼吸、血栓形成或血栓栓塞以及心脏事件。我们不确定恢复期血浆治疗是否会导致临床上相关的SAE风险增加(低确定性证据)。

作者结论

我们不确定恢复期血浆对COVID-19住院患者是否有益。关于3级和4级AE的信息有限,无法确定恢复期血浆治疗对临床上相关SAE的影响。在没有对照组的情况下,我们无法评估恢复期血浆治疗的相对安全性。虽然正在大力开展针对COVID-1-9的研究,但招募预期数量的参与者参与这些研究存在问题。前两项研究恢复期血浆的RCT提前终止以及本次更新时20项已完成或应完成研究缺乏数据说明了这些挑战。应优先进行设计良好的研究。此外,研究应以相同方式报告结局,并应考虑在所有研究组中维持共同干预可比性的重要性。有138项正在进行的评估恢复期血浆和高效免疫球蛋白的研究,其中73项是RCT(三项已完成)。这是该综述的第二次实时更新,我们将继续定期更新此综述。未来更新可能会显示与本文报告不同的结果。

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