Title of article :
Effects of Remdesivir on in-Hospital and Late Outcomes of Patients With Confirmed or Clinically Suspected COVID-19: A Propensity Score-Matched Study
Author/Authors :
Hadadi ، Azar Research Center for Clinical Virology - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Ajam ، Ali Students Scientific Research Center (SSRC) - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Montazeri ، Mahnaz Department of Infectious Diseases - Sina Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Kafan ، Samira Department of Pulmonary Diseases - Sina Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Veisizadeh ، Abdolazim Department of Infectious Diseases - Sina Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Ghoghaei ، Morteza Department of Internal Medicine - Sina Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Kazemian ، Sina Students Scientific Research Center (SSRC) - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Ahmadi ، Arezoo Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine - Sina Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Majidi ، Fazeleh Research Development Center, Sina Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Moghadasi ، Maryam Rheumatology Research Center, Sina Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Kashani ، Mehdi Research Development Center, Sina Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Ghasemi ، Faezeh Research Development Center, Sina Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Pazoki ، Marzieh Department of Pulmonary Diseases - Sina Hospital - Tehran University of Medical Sciences
Abstract :
Remdesivir, an antiviral medication, became an early promising therapeutic candidate for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) due to its ability to inhibit the virus in vitro. Current evidence about remdesivir treatment has been very controversial, so we aim to evaluate remdesivir to improve our knowledge about COVID-19 management and its long-term effects. In this retrospective cohort study using registered data derived from the Sina Hospital COVID-19 Registry with a 9-month follow-up, we enrolled patients receiving remdesivir and then matched a control group which did not receive remdesivir based on age, gender, and severity using propensity score matching. We used multivariant Cox regression to evaluate the remdesivir effect on patients 9-month and in-hospital survival. We enrolled 227 patients, 116 in remdesivir and 111 in the control group. 213(93.8%) patients developed the severe disease, 88(38.8%) died during the 9-month follow-up, and 84(37.0%) died during hospitalization. In multivariate analysis, remdesivir did not affect the 9-month all-cause mortality and in-hospital mortality. Remdesivir was associated with increased in-hospital survival only in severe patients with diabetes (HR: 0.32; 95% CI: 0.14-0.75; P:0.008), and there was a trend for better 9-month survival in severe patients with diabetes (HR: 0.47; 95% CI: 0.20-1.09; P:0.080). We concluded that remdesivir treatment did not increase the 9-month survival rate either in patients with COVID-19 or patients with severe disease and underlying diseases. On the other hand, we found that remdesivir treatment could increase in-hospital survival only in patients with severe COVID-19 and a history of diabetes mellitus
Keywords :
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID , 19) , Cox regression , Propensity score matching , Remdesivir , Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS , CoV , 2)
Journal title :
Acta Medica Iranica
Journal title :
Acta Medica Iranica