Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
Portland, USA.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2023 May 15;5(5):CD014908. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD014908.pub3.
The novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has led to significant mortality and morbidity, including a high incidence of related thrombotic events. There has been concern regarding hormonal contraception use during the COVID-19 pandemic, as this is an independent risk factor for thrombosis, particularly with estrogen-containing formulations. However, higher estrogen levels may be protective against severe COVID-19 disease. Evidence for risks of hormonal contraception use during the COVID-19 pandemic is sparse. We conducted a living systematic review that will be updated as new data emerge on the risk of thromboembolism with hormonal contraception use in patients with COVID-19.
To determine if use of hormonal contraception increases risk of venous and arterial thromboembolism in women with COVID-19. To determine if use of hormonal contraception increases other markers of COVID-19 severity including hospitalization in the intensive care unit, acute respiratory distress syndrome, intubation, and mortality. A secondary objective is to maintain the currency of the evidence, using a living systematic review approach.
We searched CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, Global Index Medicus, Global Health, and Scopus from inception on March 2023, and monitored the literature monthly. We updated the search strategies with new terms and added the database Global Index Medicus in lieu of LILACS.
We included all published and ongoing studies of patients with COVID-19 comparing outcomes of those on hormonal contraception versus those not on hormonal contraception. This included case series and non-randomized studies of interventions (NRSI).
One review author extracted study data and this was checked by a second author. Two authors individually assessed risk of bias for the comparative studies using the ROBINS-I tool and a third helped reconcile differences. For the living systematic review, we will publish updates to our synthesis every six months. In the event that we identify a study with a more rigorous study design than the current included evidence prior to the planned six-month update, we will expedite the synthesis publication.
We included three comparative NRSIs with 314,704 participants total and two case series describing 13 patients. The three NRSIs had serious to critical risk of bias in several domains and low study quality. Only one NRSI ascertained current use of contraceptives based on patient report; the other two used diagnostic codes within medical records to assess hormonal contraception use, but did not confirm current use nor indication for use. None of the NRSIs included thromboembolism as an outcome. Studies were not similar enough in terms of their outcomes, interventions, and study populations to combine with meta-analyses. We therefore narratively synthesized all included studies. Based on results from one NRSI, there may be little to no effect of combined hormonal contraception use on odds of mortality for COVID-19 positive patients (OR 1.00, 95% CI 0.41 to 2.40; 1 study, 18,892 participants; very low-certainty evidence). Two NRSIs examined hospitalization rates for hormonal contraception users versus non-users. Based on results from one NRSI, the odds of hospitalization for COVID-19 positive combined hormonal contraception users may be slightly decreased compared with non-users for patients with BMI under 35 kg/m (OR 0.79, 95% CI 0.64 to 0.97; 1 study, 295,689 participants; very low-certainty evidence). According to results of the other NRSI assessing use of any type of hormonal contraception, there may be little to no effect on hospitalization rates for COVID-19 positive individuals (OR 0.99, 95% CI 0.68 to 1.44; 1 study, 123 participants; very low-certainty evidence). We included two case series because no comparative studies directly assessed thromboembolism as an outcome. In a case series of six pediatric COVID-19 positive patients with pulmonary embolism, one (older than 15 years of age) was using combined hormonal contraception. In a second case series of seven COVID-19 positive patients with cerebral venous thrombosis, one was using oral contraceptives. One comparative study and one case series reported on intubation rates, but the evidence for both is very uncertain. In the comparative study of 123 COVID-19 positive patients (N = 44 using hormonal contraception and N = 79 not using hormonal contraception), no patients in either group required intubation. In the case series of seven individuals with cerebral venous thromboembolism, one oral contraceptive user and one non-user required intubation.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There are no comparative studies assessing risk of thromboembolism in COVID-19 patients who use hormonal contraception, which was the primary objective of this review. Very little evidence exists examining the risk of increased COVID-19 disease severity for combined hormonal contraception users compared to non-users of hormonal contraception, and the evidence that does exist is of very low certainty. The odds of hospitalization for COVID-19 positive users of combined hormonal contraceptives may be slightly decreased compared with those of hormonal contraceptive non-users, but the evidence is very uncertain as this is based on one study restricted to patients with BMI under 35 kg/m. There may be little to no effect of combined hormonal contraception use on odds of intubation or mortality among COVID-19 positive patients, and little to no effect of using any type of hormonal contraception on odds of hospitalization and intubation for COVID-19 patients. We noted no large effect for risk of increased COVID-19 disease severity among hormonal contraception users. We specifically noted gaps in pertinent data collection regarding hormonal contraception use such as formulation, hormone doses, and duration or timing of contraceptive use. Differing estrogens may have different thrombogenic potential given differing potency, so it would be important to know if a formulation contained, for example, ethinyl estradiol versus estradiol valerate. Additionally, we downgraded several studies for risk of bias because information on the timing of contraceptive use relative to COVID-19 infection and method adherence were not ascertained. No studies reported indication for hormonal contraceptive use, which is important as individuals who use hormonal management for medical conditions like heavy menstrual bleeding might have different risk profiles compared to individuals using hormones for contraception. Future studies should focus on including pertinent confounders like age, obesity, history of prior venous thromboembolism, risk factors for venous thromboembolism, and recent pregnancy.
新型冠状病毒病 (COVID-19) 导致了大量的死亡和发病,包括与之相关的血栓形成事件发生率较高。由于这是血栓形成的一个独立危险因素,尤其是含有雌激素的制剂,因此人们对 COVID-19 大流行期间使用激素避孕存在担忧。然而,较高的雌激素水平可能对严重的 COVID-19 疾病具有保护作用。关于 COVID-19 大流行期间使用激素避孕的风险证据很少。我们进行了一项正在进行的系统评价,将随着 COVID-19 患者中激素避孕与血栓栓塞风险相关的新数据不断更新。
确定 COVID-19 女性使用激素避孕是否会增加静脉和动脉血栓栓塞的风险。确定 COVID-19 患者使用激素避孕是否会增加其他疾病严重程度的标志物,包括入住重症监护病房、急性呼吸窘迫综合征、插管和死亡率。次要目标是通过使用正在进行的系统评价方法来保持证据的时效性。
我们于 2023 年 3 月从 CENTRAL、MEDLINE、Embase、CINAHL、全球索引医学、全球卫生和 Scopus 开始搜索,每月监测文献。我们使用新术语更新了搜索策略,并增加了数据库全球索引医学,以替代 LILACS。
我们纳入了所有比较 COVID-19 患者结局的已发表和正在进行的研究,比较了使用激素避孕的患者和未使用激素避孕的患者。这包括病例系列和非随机干预研究 (NRSI)。
一名综述作者提取了研究数据,另一名作者对此进行了检查。两名作者分别使用 ROBINS-I 工具评估了比较研究的偏倚风险,并由第三名作者帮助解决差异。对于正在进行的系统评价,我们将每六个月发布一次我们的综合更新。如果我们在计划的六个月更新之前发现一项具有比当前纳入证据更严格研究设计的研究,我们将加快综合出版。
我们纳入了三项比较 NRSI,共纳入 314704 名参与者,以及两项描述 13 名患者的病例系列。这三项 NRSI 在几个领域存在严重到关键的偏倚风险,研究质量较低。只有一项 NRSI 根据患者报告确定了当前的避孕方法;其他两项使用医疗记录中的诊断代码来评估激素避孕的使用情况,但没有确认当前使用情况或使用的适应症。这些 NRSI 均未将血栓栓塞作为结局。这些研究在结局、干预措施和研究人群方面差异较大,无法进行荟萃分析。因此,我们对所有纳入的研究进行了叙述性综合。根据一项 NRSI 的结果,对于 COVID-19 阳性患者,联合使用激素避孕可能对死亡率的影响很小或没有(OR 1.00,95%CI 0.41 至 2.40;1 项研究,18892 名参与者;极低确定性证据)。两项 NRSI 检查了激素避孕使用者与非使用者的住院率。根据一项 NRSI 的结果,对于 BMI 低于 35kg/m 的 COVID-19 阳性联合激素避孕使用者,与非使用者相比,住院的可能性可能略有降低(OR 0.79,95%CI 0.64 至 0.97;1 项研究,295689 名参与者;极低确定性证据)。根据评估任何类型激素避孕使用的第二项 NRSI,对于 COVID-19 阳性个体,住院率可能没有影响或影响很小(OR 0.99,95%CI 0.68 至 1.44;1 项研究,123 名参与者;极低确定性证据)。我们纳入了两项病例系列,因为没有直接比较研究评估血栓栓塞作为结局。在一项包含 6 名 COVID-19 阳性肺栓塞患儿的病例系列中,1 名(年龄大于 15 岁)正在使用联合激素避孕。在另一项包含 7 名 COVID-19 阳性脑静脉血栓形成患者的病例系列中,1 名正在使用口服避孕药。一项比较研究和一项病例系列报告了插管率,但两者的证据都非常不确定。在 123 名 COVID-19 阳性患者的比较研究中(N = 44 名使用激素避孕,N = 79 名未使用激素避孕),两组均无患者需要插管。在包含 7 名脑静脉血栓形成患者的病例系列中,1 名口服避孕药使用者和 1 名非使用者需要插管。
这是该综述的主要目标,没有比较研究评估 COVID-19 患者使用激素避孕的血栓栓塞风险。关于 COVID-19 患者中联合激素避孕与非激素避孕相比增加疾病严重程度的风险,几乎没有证据,并且现有的证据确定性很低。与激素避孕非使用者相比,COVID-19 阳性联合激素避孕使用者的住院可能性可能略有降低,但证据非常不确定,因为这基于一项仅限于 BMI 低于 35kg/m 的患者的研究。对于 COVID-19 阳性患者,联合使用激素避孕可能对插管或死亡率的影响很小,对于 COVID-19 患者,使用任何类型的激素避孕对住院和插管的影响也很小。我们没有发现激素避孕使用者发生 COVID-19 疾病严重程度增加的大影响。我们特别注意到在激素避孕使用方面存在重要的数据收集差距,例如制剂、激素剂量以及避孕使用的持续时间或时间。不同的雌激素可能由于效力不同而具有不同的血栓形成潜力,因此了解制剂中是否含有例如炔雌醇或雌二醇戊酸酯会很重要。此外,我们降低了几项研究的偏倚风险,因为没有确定激素避孕的使用时间与 COVID-19 感染和方法依从性之间的关系。没有研究报告激素避孕的使用指征,这很重要,因为一些人可能因月经过多等医疗状况而使用激素管理,而另一些人则可能因避孕而使用激素。未来的研究应重点关注纳入相关混杂因素,如年龄、肥胖、既往静脉血栓栓塞史、静脉血栓栓塞风险因素和近期妊娠。