meta|Evidence - COVID-19
click on circles to display study description...
high-dose IFN beta-1a (n=83) vs. IFN beta-1a (n=85)
randomized controlled trial some concerns about risk of bias
High-dose IFN-β 1a
IFN-β 1a (Recigen) subcutaneous injections of 88μg (24,000 IU) on days 1, 3, 6 plus lopinavir/ritonavir (Kaletra) 400mg/100 mg twice a day for 10 days, orally.
Low-dose IFN-β 1a
IFN-β 1a (Recigen) subcutaneous injections of 44μg (12,000 IU) on days 1, 3, 6 lopinavir/ritonavir (Kaletra) 400mg/100 mg twice a day for 10 days, orally.
Intervention and control groups received standards ofcare including necessary oxygen support and non-invasive or invasive mechanical ventilation.
COVID 19 hospitalized
Age >=18 years, oxygen saturation (SPO2) =< 93% or respiratory rate>= 24,presence of at least one of following manifestations on admission: Cough, shortness of breath,nasal congestion/ discharge, myalgia/arthralgia, radiation contactless body temperature >=37.8,diarrhea/vomiting and headache or fatigue. The patients’ symptoms must be in acute phase (=< 14 days).
Open-label
Single center, Loghman Hakim hospital.
The utilized seven-step ordinal scale consists of the subsequent categories: (I) Not hospitalized, and has no activity limitations; (II) Not hospitalized, but has activity limitations; (III) Hospitalized, but does not need any supplemental oxygen; (IV) Hospitalized, and needs supplemental oxygen; (V) Hospitalized, and needs either High-Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC) or non-invasive ventilation;(VI) Hospitalized, and needs invasive ventilation; and (VII) Dead.
IFN beta-1a (n=2063) vs. control (n=2064)
randomized controlled trial some concerns about risk of bias
Interferon-ß1a
Interferon (mainly subcutaneous): Three doses over six days of 44µg subcutaneous Interferon-ß1a; where intravenous interferon was available, patients on high-flow oxygen, ventilators or ECMO were instead to be given 10µg intravenously once daily for six days
Control
Lopinavir or local standard of care
Five arms: hydroxychloroquine, interferon, remdesivir, lopinavir, or standard of care only. All patients were to receive the local standard of care.
COVID 19 hospitalized
Consenting adults (age ≥18) hospitalised with definite COVID-19, not already receiving any of the study drugs, without known allergy or contra-indications to any of them (in the view of the physician responsible for their care), and without anticipated transfer within 72 hours to a non-study hospital.
Open label.
Multicenter, 405 hospitals in 30 countries in all six WHO regions.
2,063 patients in the study group = 651 patients treated with Interferon plus Lopinavir and 1,412 patients treated with Interferon only. 2,064 control patients = 679 Lopinavir and 1,385 Local SoC.
IFN beta-1a (n=487) vs. placebo (n=482)
randomized controlled trial some concerns about risk of bias
Interferon beta-1a
44 mcg of interferon beta-1a administered by a 0.5 mL subcutaneous injection on Days 1, 3, 5, and 7 while hospitalized for a total of 4 doses. plus remdesivir.
Placebo
0.5 mL placebo injection administered subcutaneously on Days 1, 3, 5, and 7 while hospitalized for a total of 4 doses plus remdesivir.
All hospitalized patients also received intravenous remdesivir as a 200 mg loading dose on day 1 followed by a 100 mg maintenance dose administered daily for up to 9 days. All patients received standard supportive care by the trial site hospital,including glucocorticoids, but other experimental treatments for COVID-19 were prohibited.
COVID-19 severe or critically
Patients already on mechanical ventilation were excluded.
Double-blind.
63 hospitals across five countries (Japan, Mexico, Singapore, South Korea, USA).
Disease severity was defined according to the eight-category ordinal scale used in previous ACTT studies. Patients defined by a score of :1 were not hospitalised and had no limitations to theiractivities; 2 were not hospitalised but had limitations to their activities or required home oxygen supplementation,or both; 3 were hospitalised but did not require supplemental oxygen and no longer required ongoing medical care; 4 were hospitalised and did not require supplemental oxygen but did require ongoing medical care; 5 were hospitalised and required any supplemental oxygen;6 were hospitalised and required non-invasive ventilation or use of high-flow oxygen devices; 7 were hospitalised and receiving invasive mechanical ventilation or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; and 8 were those who had died.
IFN beta-1a (n=46) vs. standard of care (n=46)
randomized controlled trial high risk of bias
Interferon beta-1a
IFN β-1a in addition to the standard of care. Each 44 micrograms/ml (12 million IU/ml) of interferon β-1a (ReciGen®, CinnaGen Co., Iran) was subcutaneously injected three times weekly for two consecutive weeks.
Standard of care
Hydroxychloroquine (400 mg BD in first day and then 200 mg BD) plus lopinavir/ritonavir (400/100 mg BD) or atazanavir/ritonavir (300/100 mg daily) for 7-10 days (hospital protocol).
Both groups received standard of care. Primary care, respiratory support, fluid, electrolytes, analgesic, antipyretic, corticosteroid and antibiotic were recommended in the hospital protocol if indicated.
COVID-19 severe or critically
Adult patients (aged ≥ 18 years old) with the severe disease with following criteria: (1) hypoxemia (need for noninvasive or invasive respiratory support to provide capillary oxygen saturation above 90%) (2) Hypotension (systolic blood pressure less than 90 mmHg or vasopressor requirement) (3) renal failure secondary to COVID-19 (according to KDIGO definition) (4) neurologic disorder secondary to COVID-19 (decrease of 2 or more scores in Glasgow Coma Scale) (5) thrombocytopenia secondary to COVID-19 (platelet count less than 150000 /mm3) (6) severe gastrointestinal symptoms secondary to COVID-19 (vomiting/diarrhea that caused at least mild dehydration). The diagnosis of COVID-19 was according to either a positive Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR) of the respiratory tract samples or clinical signs/symptoms and imaging findings highly suspicious for COVID-19.
Open-label.
Single center, Imam Khomeini Hospital Complex, Tehran, Iran.
Clinical response was defined according to the six-category ordinal scale. The six categories are: (1) discharge (2) hospital admission, not requiring oxygen (3) hospital admission, requiring oxygen (4) hospital admission, requiring non-invasive positive pressure ventilation (5) hospital admission requiring invasive mechanical ventilation (6) death.
IFN beta-1a (n=20) vs. standard of care (n=20)
randomized controlled trial some concerns about risk of bias
IFNβ1a
IFNβ1a (Recigen) (Subcutaneous injections of 44μg (12,000 IU) ondays 1, 3, 6) plus a single dose of hydroxychloroquine 400mg and Lopinavir/Ritonavir 400mg/100 mg twice a day for 10 days.
Standard of care
Hydroxychloroquine (Single dose of 400 mg on day1, orally) and Lopinavir/Ritonavir (Kaletra) (400mg/100 mg twice a day for 10 days) .
Three arms: IFNβ1a, IFNβ1b, control group. All three groups received standards of care consisting of the necessary oxygen support, non-invasive, or invasive mechanical ventilation.
COVID-19 severe or critically
Male, non-lactating, and non-pregnant female patients with at least 18 years of age who had confirmed COVID-19, defined as a positive test of Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase-Chain Reaction (RT-PCR) with peripheral capillary oxygen saturation level (SpO2) ≤ 93% on pulse oximetry OR a respiratory frequency ≥ 24/minute while breathing ambient air] AND at least one in every of the following: contactless infrared forehead thermometer temperature of ≥ 37·8, muscle ache, rhinitis, headache, cough or fatigue onadmission AND acute onset time for the symptoms (Days ≤ 14).
Open-label.
Single center, Loghman Hakim Hospital, a leading academic hospital of Shahid Beheshti ,Tehran, Iran.
Seven-step ordinal scale: (I) Not hospitalized, and has no activity limitations; (II) Not hospitalized, but has activity limitations; (III) Hospitalized, but does not need any supplemental oxygen; (IV) Hospitalized, and needs supplemental oxygen; (V) Hospitalized, and needs either High-Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC) or non-invasive ventilation;(VI) Hospitalized, and needs invasive ventilation; and (VII) Dead.
powered by vis.js Network