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Renin-angiotensin system blockers and susceptibility to COVID-19: a multinational open science cohort study.

Authors :
Morales, DR
Conover, MM
You, SC
Pratt, N
Kostka, K
Duarte-Salles, T
Fernández-Bertolín, S
Aragón, M
DuVall, SL
Lynch, K
Falconer, T
van Bochove, K
Sung, C
Matheny, ME
Lambert, CG
Nyberg, F
Alshammari, TM
Williams, AE
Park, RW
Weaver, J
Sena, AG
Schuemie, MJ
Rijnbeek, PR
Williams, RD
Lane, JCE
Prats-Uribe, A
Zhang, L
Areia, C
Krumholz, HM
Prieto-Alhambra, D
Ryan, PB
Hripcsak, G
Suchard, MA
Morales, DR
Conover, MM
You, SC
Pratt, N
Kostka, K
Duarte-Salles, T
Fernández-Bertolín, S
Aragón, M
DuVall, SL
Lynch, K
Falconer, T
van Bochove, K
Sung, C
Matheny, ME
Lambert, CG
Nyberg, F
Alshammari, TM
Williams, AE
Park, RW
Weaver, J
Sena, AG
Schuemie, MJ
Rijnbeek, PR
Williams, RD
Lane, JCE
Prats-Uribe, A
Zhang, L
Areia, C
Krumholz, HM
Prieto-Alhambra, D
Ryan, PB
Hripcsak, G
Suchard, MA
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEs) and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) could influence infection risk of coronavirus disease (COVID-19). Observational studies to date lack pre-specification, transparency, rigorous ascertainment adjustment and international generalizability, with contradictory results. METHODS: Using electronic health records from Spain (SIDIAP) and the United States (Columbia University Irving Medical Center and Department of Veterans Affairs), we conducted a systematic cohort study with prevalent ACE, ARB, calcium channel blocker (CCB) and thiazide diuretic (THZ) use to determine relative risk of COVID-19 diagnosis and related hospitalization outcomes. The study addressed confounding through large-scale propensity score adjustment and negative control experiments. RESULTS: Following over 1.1 million antihypertensive users identified between November 2019 and January 2020, we observed no significant difference in relative COVID-19 diagnosis risk comparing ACE/ARB vs CCB/THZ monotherapy (hazard ratio: 0.98; 95% CI 0.84 - 1.14), nor any difference for mono/combination use (1.01; 0.90 - 1.15). ACE alone and ARB alone similarly showed no relative risk difference when compared to CCB/THZ monotherapy or mono/combination use. Directly comparing ACE vs. ARB demonstrated a moderately lower risk with ACE, non-significant for monotherapy (0.85; 0.69 - 1.05) and marginally significant for mono/combination users (0.88; 0.79 - 0.99). We observed, however, no significant difference between drug- classes for COVID-19 hospitalization or pneumonia risk across all comparisons. CONCLUSION: There is no clinically significant increased risk of COVID-19 diagnosis or hospitalization with ACE or ARB use. Users should not discontinue or change their treatment to avoid COVID-19.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315700617
Document Type :
Electronic Resource