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Effect of Hydroxychloroquine in Hospitalized Patients with Covid-19

Authors :
Susara Blunden
Alexander Mentzer
Tom Dymond
Robert Heyderman
Stacy Todd
Richard Haynes
Ahmad Abu-Arafeh
William Ricketts
Simon Drysdale
Danyal Jajbhay
Grant D. Stewart
Andrew Ustianowski
Jane Blazeby
Ashton Barnett-Vanes
Nicholas Kametas
Elizabeth Bancroft
Ankur Gupta-Wright
Hanif Esmail
Gerard McKnight
Catherine Harwood
Joe Fawke
Vivien Price
Tuck-Kay Loke
Kieran Nunn
Mili Estee Torok
Wei Shen Lim
Vishal Dey
Brendan Payne
Alexander Stockdale
Charles Christoph Roehr
Dominic Crocombe
Imogen Skene
Martin Landray
Anna Bibby
Jamie Brannigan
Padmasayee Papineni
Søren Kudsk-Iversen
Kathryn Puxty
Katrina Cathie
Maheshi Nirmala Ramasamy
Alan Montgomery
Louis Grandjean
Xin Hui Chan
Ben Gibbison
Cielito Caneja
Dinesh Saralaya
Omer Elneima
Charles Reynard
Natalie Blencowe
Eleanor Mishra
Henry HL Wu
Roy Soiza
Patrick Lillie
Paul Pfeffer
Christian Alexander Linares
Simon Tso
Benjamin Caplin
Sarah Burge
Sakib Rokadiya
Brunskill Nigel
Joel Tarning
Manish Patel
Jamie Cooper
Lee Hoggett
Nazima Pathan
Alex Horsley
Saul Faust
Martin Llewelyn
Alex Scott
Kim Hinshaw
Giorgio Calisti
Effrossyni Gkrania-Klotsas
Shaman Jhanji
Ben Burton
Anna Daunt
Chetan Parmar
Chris Imray
Christopher Green
Jonathan Underwood
Mark Peters
James A Watson
Eoin O'Sullivan
Pallav Shah
Paul Dark
Luke Hodgson
Ryan Malcolm Hum
Varun Sarodaya
Pilar Rivera Ortega
Jonathan Emberson
Ben Shelley
Richard Adams
Joseph Barker
John Kenneth Baillie
Manu Vatish
Tony Whitehouse
University of St Andrews. School of Medicine
Group, RECOVERY Collaborative
Jaki, Thomas [0000-0002-1096-188X]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, RECOVERY Collaborative Group & Evans, D G 2020, ' Effect of Hydroxychloroquine in Hospitalized Patients with Covid-19 ', The New England Journal of Medicine, vol. 383, no. 21, pp. 2030-2040 . https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2022926, https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmoa2022926, The New England journal of medicine, vol. 383, no. 21, pp. 2030-2040, 2020., The New England Journal of Medicine
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Supported by a grant (MC_PC_19056) to the University of Oxford from UK Research and Innovation and the NIHR and by core funding provided by NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre, Wellcome, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Department for International Development, Health Data Research UK, the Medical Research Council Population Health Research Unit, the NIHR Health Protection Unit in Emerging and Zoonotic Infections, and NIHR Clinical Trials Unit Support Funding. BACKGROUND: Hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine have been proposed as treatments for coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) on the basis of in vitro activity and data from uncontrolled studies and small, randomized trials. METHODS: In this randomized, controlled, open-label platform trial comparing a range of possible treatments with usual care in patients hospitalized with Covid-19, we randomly assigned 1561 patients to receive hydroxychloroquine and 3155 to receive usual care. The primary outcome was 28-day mortality. RESULTS: The enrollment of patients in the hydroxychloroquine group was closed on June 5, 2020, after an interim analysis determined that there was a lack of efficacy. Death within 28 days occurred in 421 patients (27.0%) in the hydroxychloroquine group and in 790 (25.0%) in the usual-care group (rate ratio, 1.09; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.97 to 1.23; P = 0.15). Consistent results were seen in all prespecified subgroups of patients. The results suggest that patients in the hydroxychloroquine group were less likely to be discharged from the hospital alive within 28 days than those in the usual-care group (59.6% vs. 62.9%; rate ratio, 0.90; 95% CI, 0.83 to 0.98). Among the patients who were not undergoing mechanical ventilation at baseline, those in the hydroxychloroquine group had a higher frequency of invasive mechanical ventilation or death (30.7% vs. 26.9%; risk ratio, 1.14; 95% CI, 1.03 to 1.27). There was a small numerical excess of cardiac deaths (0.4 percentage points) but no difference in the incidence of new major cardiac arrhythmia among the patients who received hydroxychloroquine. CONCLUSIONS: Among patients hospitalized with Covid-19, those who received hydroxychloroquine did not have a lower incidence of death at 28 days than those who received usual care. Publisher PDF

Details

ISSN :
15334406 and 00284793
Volume :
383
Issue :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The New England journal of medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3508cd0098c2966729f1cf3555643f26
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2022926