Department of Pharmacy, Chang-Gung Memorial Hospital, Linkou 244, Taiwan.
IMPACT (Innovation in Mental and Physical Health and Clinical Treatment) Strategic Research Centre, School of Medicine, Barwon Health, Deakin University, Geelong, VIC 3220, Australia.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2023 Feb 24;20(5):4088. doi: 10.3390/ijerph20054088.
Preliminary meta-analyses suggested that fluvoxamine was effective in treating COVID-19 infection. However, the reliability of this evidence has not yet been examined. MEDLINE, CENTRAL, EMBASE, PsycINFO, and ClinicalTrials.gov were searched to identify any randomized controlled trials (RCTs) from the inception of the databases to 5 February 2023. We used trial sequential analysis (TSA) to examine the reliability of the current existing evidence on the benefits of fluvoxamine on COVID-19 infection. The primary outcome was clinical deterioration, as defined in the original study (reported as odds ratio (OR), with 95% confidence intervals), and the secondary outcome was hospitalization. In the TSA, we used the relative risk reduction thresholds of 10, 20, and 30%. The updated meta-analysis of the five RCTs showed that fluvoxamine was not associated with lower odds of clinical deterioration when compared with a placebo (OR: 0.81; 0.59-1.11). The effect of fluvoxamine lay within the futility boundary (i.e., lack of effect) when using a 30% relative risk reduction threshold. The effect estimates lay between the superiority and futility boundary using the 10% and 20% threshold, and the required size of information was not reached for these two thresholds. The effect of fluvoxamine on the odds of hospitalization was not statistically significant (0.76; 0.56-1.03). In conclusion, there is no reliable evidence that fluvoxamine, when compared to a placebo, reduces the relative risk of clinical deterioration among adult patients with COVID-19 infection by 30%, and a relative risk reduction of 20% or 10% is still uncertain. The role of fluvoxamine as a COVID-19 treatment cannot be justified.
初步的荟萃分析表明,氟伏沙明在治疗 COVID-19 感染方面是有效的。然而,这一证据的可靠性尚未得到检验。我们检索了 MEDLINE、CENTRAL、EMBASE、PsycINFO 和 ClinicalTrials.gov,以从数据库创建开始到 2023 年 2 月 5 日,确定任何随机对照试验(RCT)。我们使用试验序贯分析(TSA)来检查目前关于氟伏沙明对 COVID-19 感染益处的现有证据的可靠性。主要结局是临床恶化,按原始研究定义(报告为比值比(OR),置信区间为 95%),次要结局是住院治疗。在 TSA 中,我们使用了 10%、20%和 30%的相对风险降低阈值。五项 RCT 的更新荟萃分析显示,与安慰剂相比,氟伏沙明并未降低临床恶化的几率(OR:0.81;0.59-1.11)。当使用 30%的相对风险降低阈值时,氟伏沙明的效果位于无效边界内(即无效果)。使用 10%和 20%的阈值时,效果估计值介于优势和无效边界之间,对于这两个阈值,所需的信息大小未达到。氟伏沙明对住院几率的影响没有统计学意义(0.76;0.56-1.03)。总之,没有可靠的证据表明氟伏沙明与安慰剂相比,能降低 COVID-19 感染成年患者的临床恶化的相对风险 30%,而相对风险降低 20%或 10%仍不确定。不能证明氟伏沙明作为 COVID-19 治疗的作用。