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Outcomes of COVID-19 in patients with CLL: a multicenter international experience

Authors :
Neil Bailey
Fatima Miras
Jose Angel Hernandez-Rivas
Chadi Nabhan
John M. Pagel
Elise A. Chong
Manali Kamdar
Sigrid S. Skånland
Raul Cordoba
Matthew S. Davids
Mazyar Shadman
Angus Broom
Ellin Berman
Shuo Ma
Anthony R. Mato
Paul M. Barr
Meera Patel
Lindsey E. Roeker
Erlene K. Seymour
José A. García-Marco
Andrew D. Zelenetz
Anders Österborg
Matthew R. Wilson
Toby A. Eyre
Danielle M. Brander
Krista Isaac
Jeffrey Pu
Mark B. Geyer
Richard R. Furman
Sonia Lebowitz
Renata Walewska
Talha Munir
Nikita Malakhov
John N. Allan
Scott F. Huntington
Inhye E. Ahn
Darko Antic
Lotta Hanson
Adrian Wiestner
Ryan Jacobs
Paola Ghione
Nicolas Martinez-Calle
Lori A. Leslie
Erica Bhavsar
Suchitra Sundaram
Daniel Wojenski
Jennifer R. Brown
Chaitra S. Ujjani
Amanda N. Seddon
Daniel Naya
Javier López-Jiménez
Harriet S. Walter
Christine E. Ryan
Craig A. Portell
Krish Patel
Dima El-Sharkawi
Michael Koropsak
Guilherme Fleury Perini
Noemi Fernandez Escalada
Helen Parry
Nicole Lamanna
Piers E.M. Patten
Source :
Blood
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

There is a Blood Commentary on this article in this issue.<br />Key Points Both watch-and-wait and treated CLL patients have high mortality rates when admitted for COVID-19. Receiving a BTKi for CLL at COVID-19 diagnosis severe enough to require hospitalization did not influence case fatality rate in this study.<br />Given advanced age, comorbidities, and immune dysfunction, chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients may be at particularly high risk of infection and poor outcomes related to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Robust analysis of outcomes for CLL patients, particularly examining effects of baseline characteristics and CLL-directed therapy, is critical to optimally manage CLL patients through this evolving pandemic. CLL patients diagnosed with symptomatic COVID-19 across 43 international centers (n = 198) were included. Hospital admission occurred in 90%. Median age at COVID-19 diagnosis was 70.5 years. Median Cumulative Illness Rating Scale score was 8 (range, 4-32). Thirty-nine percent were treatment naive (“watch and wait”), while 61% had received ≥1 CLL-directed therapy (median, 2; range, 1-8). Ninety patients (45%) were receiving active CLL therapy at COVID-19 diagnosis, most commonly Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitors (BTKi’s; n = 68/90 [76%]). At a median follow-up of 16 days, the overall case fatality rate was 33%, though 25% remain admitted. Watch-and-wait and treated cohorts had similar rates of admission (89% vs 90%), intensive care unit admission (35% vs 36%), intubation (33% vs 25%), and mortality (37% vs 32%). CLL-directed treatment with BTKi’s at COVID-19 diagnosis did not impact survival (case fatality rate, 34% vs 35%), though the BTKi was held during the COVID-19 course for most patients. These data suggest that the subgroup of CLL patients admitted with COVID-19, regardless of disease phase or treatment status, are at high risk of death. Future epidemiologic studies are needed to assess severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection risk, these data should be validated independently, and randomized studies of BTKi’s in COVID-19 are needed to provide definitive evidence of benefit.<br />Visual Abstract

Details

ISSN :
15280020
Volume :
136
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb43079319a15dc3fe017b893a1f0a3e