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全身性皮质类固醇治疗 COVID-19。

Systemic corticosteroids for the treatment of COVID-19.

机构信息

Cochrane Haematology, Department I of Internal Medicine, Center for Integrated Oncology Aachen Bonn Cologne Duesseldorf, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany.

Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care, University of Leipzig Medical Center, Leipzig, Germany.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Aug 16;8(8):CD014963. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD014963.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Systemic corticosteroids are used to treat people with COVID-19 because they counter hyper-inflammation. Existing evidence syntheses suggest a slight benefit on mortality. So far, systemic corticosteroids are one of the few treatment options for COVID-19. Nonetheless, size of effect, certainty of the evidence, optimal therapy regimen, and selection of patients who are likely to benefit most are factors that remain to be evaluated.

OBJECTIVES

To assess whether systemic corticosteroids are effective and safe in the treatment of people with COVID-19, and to keep up to date with the evolving evidence base using a living systematic review approach.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched the Cochrane COVID-19 Study Register (which includes PubMed, Embase, CENTRAL, ClinicalTrials.gov, WHO ICTRP, and medRxiv), Web of Science (Science Citation Index, Emerging Citation Index), and the WHO COVID-19 Global literature on coronavirus disease to identify completed and ongoing studies to 16 April 2021.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) that evaluated systemic corticosteroids for people with COVID-19, irrespective of disease severity, participant age, gender or ethnicity.  We included any type or dose of systemic corticosteroids. We included the following comparisons: systemic corticosteroids plus standard care versus standard care (plus/minus placebo), dose comparisons, timing comparisons (early versus late), different types of corticosteroids and systemic corticosteroids versus other active substances.  We excluded studies that included populations with other coronavirus diseases (severe acute respiratory syndrome or Middle East respiratory syndrome), corticosteroids in combination with other active substances versus standard care, topical or inhaled corticosteroids, and corticosteroids for long-COVID treatment.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

We followed standard Cochrane methodology. To assess the risk of bias in included studies, we used the Cochrane 'Risk of bias' 2 tool for RCTs. We rated the certainty of evidence using the GRADE approach for the following outcomes: all-cause mortality, ventilator-free days, new need for invasive mechanical ventilation, quality of life, serious adverse events, adverse events, and hospital-acquired infections.

MAIN RESULTS

We included 11 RCTs in 8075 participants, of whom 7041 (87%) originated from high-income countries. A total of 3072 participants were randomised to corticosteroid arms and the majority received dexamethasone (n = 2322). We also identified 42 ongoing studies and 16 studies reported as being completed or terminated in a study registry, but without results yet.  Hospitalised individuals with a confirmed or suspected diagnosis of symptomatic COVID-19 Systemic corticosteroids plus standard care versus standard care plus/minus placebo  We included 10 RCTs (7989 participants), one of which did not report any of our pre-specified outcomes and thus our analysis included outcome data from nine studies.  All-cause mortality (at longest follow-up available): systemic corticosteroids plus standard care probably reduce all-cause mortality slightly in people with COVID-19 compared to standard care alone (median 28 days: risk difference of 30 in 1000 participants fewer than the control group rate of 275 in 1000 participants; risk ratio (RR) 0.89, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.80 to 1.00; 9 RCTs, 7930 participants; moderate-certainty evidence).  Ventilator-free days: corticosteroids may increase ventilator-free days (MD 2.6 days more than control group rate of 4 days, 95% CI 0.67 to 4.53; 1 RCT, 299 participants; low-certainty evidence). Ventilator-free days have inherent limitations as a composite endpoint and should be interpreted with caution.  New need for invasive ventilation: the evidence is of very low certainty. Because of high risk of bias arising from deaths that occurred before ventilation we are uncertain about the size and direction of the effects. Consequently, we did not perform analysis beyond the presentation of descriptive statistics.  Quality of life/neurological outcome: no data were available. Serious adverse events: we included data on two RCTs (678 participants) that evaluated systemic corticosteroids compared to standard care (plus/minus placebo); for adverse events and hospital-acquired infections, we included data on five RCTs (660 participants). Because of high risk of bias, heterogeneous definitions, and underreporting we are uncertain about the size and direction of the effects. Consequently, we did not perform analysis beyond the presentation of descriptive statistics (very low-certainty evidence).    Different types, dosages or timing of systemic corticosteroids  We identified one study that compared methylprednisolone with dexamethasone. The evidence for mortality and new need for invasive mechanical ventilation is very low certainty due to the small number of participants (n = 86). No data were available for the other outcomes. We did not identify comparisons of different dosages or timing. Outpatients with asymptomatic or mild disease Currently, there are no studies published in populations with asymptomatic infection or mild disease.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Moderate-certainty evidence shows that systemic corticosteroids probably slightly reduce all-cause mortality in people hospitalised because of symptomatic COVID-19. Low-certainty evidence suggests that there may also be a reduction in ventilator-free days. Since we are unable to  adjust for the impact of early death on subsequent endpoints, the findings for ventilation outcomes and harms have limited applicability to inform treatment decisions. Currently, there is no evidence for asymptomatic or mild disease (non-hospitalised participants).  There is an urgent need for good-quality evidence for specific subgroups of disease severity, for which we propose level of respiratory support at randomisation. This applies to the comparison or subgroups of different types and doses of corticosteroids, too. Outcomes apart from mortality should be measured and analysed appropriately taking into account confounding through death if applicable.  We identified 42 ongoing and 16 completed but not published RCTs in trials registries suggesting possible changes of effect estimates and certainty of the evidence in the future. Most ongoing studies target people who need respiratory support at baseline. With the living approach of this review, we will continue to update our search and include eligible trials and published data.

摘要

背景

全身性皮质类固醇被用于治疗 COVID-19 患者,因为它们可以对抗过度炎症。现有的证据综合表明,皮质类固醇对死亡率有一定益处。到目前为止,全身性皮质类固醇是 COVID-19 为数不多的治疗方法之一。尽管如此,皮质类固醇的疗效大小、证据确定性、最佳治疗方案以及最有可能受益的患者的选择仍有待评估。

目的

评估全身性皮质类固醇在 COVID-19 患者治疗中的有效性和安全性,并通过使用动态系统评价方法不断更新证据基础。

检索方法

我们检索了 Cochrane COVID-19 试验注册库(其中包括 PubMed、Embase、CENTRAL、ClinicalTrials.gov、WHO ICTRP 和 medRxiv)、Web of Science(科学引文索引、新兴引文索引)和世界卫生组织 COVID-19 全球冠状病毒疾病文献,以确定截止到 2021 年 4 月 16 日已完成和正在进行的研究。

选择标准

我们纳入了评估 COVID-19 患者全身性皮质类固醇治疗的随机对照试验(RCT),无论疾病严重程度、参与者年龄、性别或种族如何。我们纳入了任何类型或剂量的全身性皮质类固醇。我们纳入了以下比较:全身性皮质类固醇加标准治疗与标准治疗(加/不加安慰剂)、剂量比较、时间比较(早期与晚期)、不同类型皮质类固醇和全身性皮质类固醇与其他活性物质。我们排除了包括其他冠状病毒疾病(严重急性呼吸综合征或中东呼吸综合征)患者的研究、皮质类固醇联合其他活性物质与标准治疗、局部或吸入皮质类固醇以及皮质类固醇治疗长 COVID 的研究。

数据收集和分析

我们遵循了标准的 Cochrane 方法。为了评估纳入研究的偏倚风险,我们使用了 Cochrane“风险偏倚”2 工具对 RCT 进行评估。我们使用 GRADE 方法评估了以下结局的证据确定性:全因死亡率、无呼吸机天数、新需要有创机械通气、生活质量、严重不良事件、不良事件和医院获得性感染。

主要结果

我们纳入了 11 项 RCT 中的 8075 名参与者,其中 7041 名(87%)来自高收入国家。共有 3072 名参与者被随机分配到皮质类固醇组,大多数参与者接受了地塞米松(n=2322)。我们还确定了 42 项正在进行的研究和 16 项在研究登记处报告为已完成或终止但尚未公布结果的研究。确诊或疑似有症状 COVID-19 的住院患者

全身性皮质类固醇加标准治疗与标准治疗加/不加安慰剂:我们纳入了 10 项 RCT(7989 名参与者),其中一项没有报告我们预先指定的任何结局,因此我们的分析包括了 9 项研究的结局数据。全因死亡率(最长随访时间):全身性皮质类固醇加标准治疗可能会降低 COVID-19 患者的全因死亡率,与单独使用标准治疗相比(中位数 28 天:风险差异为每 1000 名参与者中 30 人低于对照组每 1000 名参与者中 275 人;风险比(RR)0.89,95%置信区间(CI)0.80 至 1.00;9 项 RCT,7930 名参与者;中等确定性证据)。无呼吸机天数:皮质类固醇可能会增加无呼吸机天数(与对照组每 1000 名参与者中 4 天的比率相比,MD 增加 2.6 天,95%CI 为 0.67 至 4.53;1 项 RCT,299 名参与者;低确定性证据)。无呼吸机天数作为复合结局有其固有局限性,应谨慎解释。新需要有创通气:证据的确定性非常低。由于发生在通气之前的死亡导致的偏倚风险,我们不确定效果的大小和方向。因此,我们没有进行超出描述性统计的分析。生活质量/神经结局:无数据。严重不良事件:我们纳入了 2 项 RCT(678 名参与者)比较全身性皮质类固醇与标准治疗(加/不加安慰剂)的数据;对于不良事件和医院获得性感染,我们纳入了 5 项 RCT(660 名参与者)的数据。由于偏倚风险高、定义不同和报告不足,我们不确定效果的大小和方向。因此,我们没有进行超出描述性统计的分析(非常低确定性证据)。不同类型、剂量或时间的全身性皮质类固醇:我们确定了一项比较甲泼尼龙和地塞米松的研究。由于参与者人数较少(n=86),死亡率和新需要有创机械通气的证据确定性非常低。对于其他结局,没有数据。我们没有发现不同剂量或时间的比较。无症状或轻症患者:目前,在无症状感染或轻症患者人群中没有发表的研究。

作者结论

中等确定性证据表明,全身性皮质类固醇可能会降低因有症状 COVID-19 而住院的患者的全因死亡率。低确定性证据表明,无呼吸机天数也可能减少。由于我们无法调整早期死亡对后续结局的影响,因此通气结局和危害的发现对指导治疗决策的适用性有限。目前,对于无症状或轻症疾病(非住院参与者)没有证据。非常需要针对疾病严重程度的特定亚组的高质量证据,我们为此提出了随机分组时的呼吸支持水平。这也适用于不同类型和剂量皮质类固醇的比较。除了死亡率之外的结局,应在适用时考虑通过死亡进行混杂因素分析。我们在试验登记处确定了 42 项正在进行的和 16 项已完成但未发表的 RCT,这表明未来可能会改变效应估计和证据的确定性。大多数正在进行的研究针对基线时需要呼吸支持的患者。通过本综述的动态方法,我们将继续更新搜索并纳入合格的试验和已发表的数据。

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