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  5. Inhaled budesonide in the treatment of early COVID-19 illness: a randomised controlled trial

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Preprint
en
2021

Inhaled budesonide in the treatment of early COVID-19 illness: a randomised controlled trial

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0 Files

en
2021
DOI: 10.1101/2021.02.04.21251134

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Peter J Barnes
Peter J Barnes

Imperial College London

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Sanjay Ramakrishnan
Dan V. Nicolau
Beverly Langford
+21 more

Abstract

Abstract Background Multiple early hospital cohorts of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) showed that patients with chronic respiratory disease were significantly under-represented. We hypothesised that the widespread use of inhaled glucocorticoids was responsible for this finding and tested if inhaled glucorticoids would be an effective treatment for early COVID-19 illness. Methods We conducted a randomised, open label trial of inhaled budesonide, compared to usual care, in adults within 7 days of the onset of mild Covid-19 symptoms. The primary end point was COVID-19-related urgent care visit, emergency department assessment or hospitalisation. The trial was stopped early after independent statistical review concluded that study outcome would not change with further participant enrolment. Results 146 patients underwent randomisation. For the per protocol population (n=139), the primary outcome occurred in 10 participants and 1 participant in the usual care and budesonide arms respectively (difference in proportion 0.131, p=0.004). The number needed to treat with inhaled budesonide to reduce COVID-19 deterioration was 8. Clinical recovery was 1 day shorter in the budesonide arm compared to the usual care arm (median of 7 days versus 8 days respectively, logrank test p=0.007). Proportion of days with a fever and proportion of participants with at least 1 day of fever was lower in the budesonide arm. Fewer participants randomised to budesonide had persistent symptoms at day 14 and day 28 compared to participants receiving usual care. Conclusion Early administration of inhaled budesonide reduced the likelihood of needing urgent medical care and reduced time to recovery following early COVID-19 infection. (Funded by Oxford NIHR Biomedical Research Centre and AstraZeneca; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04416399 ) Research in context Evidence before this study The majority of interventions studied for the COVID-19 pandemic are focused on hospitalised patients. Widely available and broadly relevant interventions for mild COVID-19 are urgently needed. Added value of this study In this open label randomised controlled trial, inhaled budesonide, when given to adults with early COVID-19 illness, reduces the likelihood of requiring urgent care, emergency department consultation or hospitalisation. There was also a quicker resolution of fever, a known poor prognostic marker in COVID-19 and a faster self-reported and questionnaire reported symptom resolution. There were fewer participants with persistent COVID-19 symptoms at 14 and 28 days after budesonide therapy compared to usual care. Implications of all the available evidence The STOIC trial potentially provides the first easily accessible effective intervention in early COVID-19. By assessing health care resource utilisation, the study provides an exciting option to help with the worldwide pressure on health care systems due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Data from this study also suggests a potentially effective treatment to prevent the long term morbidity from persistent COVID-19 symptoms.

How to cite this publication

Sanjay Ramakrishnan, Dan V. Nicolau, Beverly Langford, Mahdi Mahdi, Helen Jeffers, Christine Mwasuku, Karolina Krassowska, Robin Fox, Ian Binnian, Victoria Glover, Stephen Bright, Christopher Butler, Jennifer Cane, Andreas Halner, Philippa C. Matthews, Louise Donnelly, Jodie L. Simpson, Jonathan Baker, Nabil T. Fadai, Stefan Peterson, Thomas Bengtsson, Peter J Barnes, Richard Russell, Mona Bafadhel (2021). Inhaled budesonide in the treatment of early COVID-19 illness: a randomised controlled trial. , DOI: https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.02.04.21251134.

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Publication Details

Type

Preprint

Year

2021

Authors

24

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.02.04.21251134

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