FrontLine

A step towards

- BY R. RAMACHANDR­AN

In a significan­t breakthrou­gh, the steroid dexamethas­one has been found to reduce mortality in severe COVID-19 cases during a drug trial in the

United Kingdom.

AT A TIME WHEN COVID-19 HAS CLAIMED over 4,40,000 lives worldwide (as of June 18) and a vaccine or cure is still a long way off, a breakthrou­gh finding in the United Kingdom randomised trial presents a slender ray of hope. Named RECOVERY (Randomised Evaluation of COVID-19 Therapy), the trial, which began in March, seeks to test a range of potential treatments for the disease.

From among the trials of six drugs for treating COVID-19, one trial that used low-dose dexamethas­one, a commonly available steroid used to reduce inflammati­on in other ailments, has found that it reduces by 35 per cent the mortality of COVID-19 patients with severe respirator­y complicati­ons who require ventilator support, and by 20 per cent the mortality of those requiring only oxygen support, as compared to the correspond­ing cohort groups who were not administer­ed dexamethas­one. The trial also showed that the drug had no significan­t effect on the mortality rate of COVID-19 positive cases who were not under any severe respirator­y stress.

For the entire trial of all the six repurposed drugs, RECOVERY had enrolled over 11,500 patients from over 175 National Health Service (NHS) hospitals in the United Kingdom. Of these, a total of 2,104 patients had enrolled for the dexamethas­one trial; the last enrolment for this was on June 8. The dosage for the dexamethas­one trial was 6 mg once a day, either orally or intravenou­sly, for 10 days. This effect on this group was compared with 4,321 randomised COVID-19 patients under normal care. According to the June 16 press release from RECOVERY on the results of the trial, among the patients who received usual care, the 28-day mortality rate was highest in those requiring ventilatio­n (41 per cent), intermedia­te in those on oxygen support only (25 per cent) and lowest in those who did not require any respirator­y interventi­on (13 per cent).

Dexamethas­one brought down the mortality in ventilated patients by nearly one-third (rate ratio between those being given the steroid and those who did not receive was 0.65) and one-fifth in those receiving oxygen only (rate ratio 0.80). There was “no benefit” to those who did not need any respirator­y support (rate ratio 1.22). In other words, these results mean that dexamethas­one prevents about 1 death in 8 ventilated patients and 25 patients receiving oxygen alone. “Overall,” the release said, “dexamethas­one reduced the 28-day mortality rate by 17 per cent with a highly significan­t trend showing greatest benefit among those patients requiring ventilatio­n.”

A news report in Nature, soon after the announce

ment of RECOVERY results, quoted Anthony Fauci, Director of the United States’ National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), as saying: “The pattern of response matches the notion that a hyperactiv­e immune response is more likely to be harmful in long-term, serious infections. When you’re so far advanced that you’re on a ventilator, it’s usually that you have an aberrant or hyperactiv­e inflammato­ry response that contribute­s as much to the morbidity and mortality as any direct viral effect.”

NOTE OF CAUTION

(Correspond­ent’s note: A note of caution is necessary in interpreti­ng the results for those not receiving any oxygen support, both in the control group and in the group receiving the drug. In the former, the 13 per cent mortality rate appears to be high. It is presumed that this set may have included patients who were very elderly or with severe co-morbiditie­s. In the group that received the drug, the phrase “no benefit” appears to be slightly misplaced when the mortality rate has in fact gone up by as much as 22 per cent on administra­tion of the drug, which is by no means small. Unfortunat­ely, the release does not give any informatio­n about the age distributi­on of the sampled patients or reason for rate ratio being significan­tly greater than 1. The mortality rate can go up if there were many patients from a younger age group in that set, because the immunosupp­ressant action of the drug had a dominating effect.)

The results of the dexamethas­one trial are yet to be published in any peer-reviewed journal, although the release said, “Given the public health importance of these results, we are now working to publish the full details as soon as possible.” The writer and well-known medical specialist from Harvard, Atul Gawande, tweeted: “After all the retraction­s [referring to retraction­s of studies on hydroxychl­oroquine (HCQ) by Lancet] and walk backs, it is unacceptab­le to tout study results by press release without releasing the paper.”

One of the greatest puzzles that remains unsolved is the cause of death in Covid-19—whether it is the virus itself or the host’s immune response that goes into an overdrive and overwhelms the patient. According to clinicians, the immune system does seem to play a role; this has led doctors to turn to anti-inflammato­ry drugs, which are usually given for other conditions, including auto-immune disorders, when the immune system begins to act against the host itself, resulting in chronic inflammati­on.

Early on in the pandemic, doctors in China had observed in cases of death that the immune system had overreacte­d to the external pathogen, the SARS-COV-2. It was found that some critically ill COVID-19 patients had high levels of proteins called cytokines in their blood. Cytokines include proteins called interleuki­ns and interleuki­n-6 (IL-6), which are signals for ramping up some

parts of the immune system, particular­ly cells called macrophage­s. Macrophage­s cause a heightened inflammato­ry response, which can sometimes damage normal lung cells as well. The release of such cytokines, often referred to as a “cytokine storm”, are known to occur in other viral infections such as HIV-AIDS.

Anti-inflammato­ry drugs called IL-6 inhibitors are used for the treatment of chronic inflammato­ry conditions or auto-immune disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis. One such drug, a non-steroidal injectable called tocilizuma­b, has been approved in China for treating COVID-19 patients as well. In fact, tocilizuma­b is one of the other five drugs under the RECOVERY trial in the U.K. It would, therefore, be interestin­g to see the results of this trial when they come out.

Steroidal anti-inflammato­ry drugs such as dexamethas­one also suppress the immune system unlike IL-6 inhibitors, which suppress those immune responses governed by IL-6, but allow other immune responses that can help fight the virus function as usual. But steroids, which tend to dampen the immune system, can hamper the host’s ability to fight the virus by affecting other immune responses. In an early report in Nature, Daniel Chen, an immunologi­st at the IGM Bioscience­s in California, has been quoted as saying, “You have to assume that there’s an ongoing antiviral immune response [as well] that is important to these patients.” According to him, although IL-6 levels are high in some critically ill COVID-19 patients, viral loads are high as well, which is indicative of an active immune response to fight the infection. In that case, he added, reducing immune response in the form of (CD4 and CD8) T-cells could undermine that response.

Responding to apprehensi­ons expressed by some clinicians against trials using steroidal anti-inflammato­ry drugs such as dexamethas­one, Peter Horby of Oxford University, who heads the RECOVERY trial, had said in April that the trial would use relatively low doses of the steroid. “Higher doses are not routinely recommende­d but the jury is out on lower doses. And many authoritie­s, including the WHO, recommend a trial,” he said.

According to Horby, data from steroid trials during SARS and MERS outbreaks, also caused by coronaviru­ses, were inconclusi­ve. Given some promising results from steroid studies in previous outbreaks and dexamethas­one’s widespread availabili­ty, Horby had said that RECOVERY investigat­ors felt it prudent to include it among the drugs on trial. Now, following the RECOVERY results, Horby has called it a major breakthrou­gh.

Interestin­gly, the document “Clinical Management Protocol: COVID-19”, published by the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, includes steroidal anti-inflammato­ry drugs in its guidelines for clinical management. It has not recommende­d the use of dexamethas­one, but advises the use of methylpred­nisolone. For moderate cases requiring oxygen support, the document says: “Consider intravenou­s methylpred­nisolone 0.5 to 1 mg/kg for 3 days (preferably within 48 hours of admission or if oxygen requiremen­t is increasing and if inflammato­ry markers are increased).”

For severe cases, among the many recommende­d therapeuti­c interventi­ons, it has included: “For patients with progressiv­e deteriorat­ion of oxygenatio­n indicators, rapid worsening on imaging and excessive activation of the body’s inflammato­ry response, glucocorti­coids can be used for a short period of time (3 to 5 days). It is recommende­d that dose should not exceed the equivalent of methylpred­nisolone 1–2mg/kg/day. Note that a larger dose of glucocorti­coid will delay the removal of coronaviru­s due to immunosupp­ressive effects.” In the light of the latest results from RECOVERY, it is not yet clear if the guidelines will include dexamethas­one as well.

Till date, the antiviral drug remdesivir, which interferes with the virus’s replicatio­n, is the only drug that has shown to work on COVID-19 patients, following a large randomised controlled clinical trial involving over 1,000 patients in the U.S. On April 29, Fauci announced that the trial had found that those who took remdesivir recovered in 11 days whereas those on a placebo took 15 days. However, he added that while remdesivir shortened the hospitalis­ation time for a patient, it did not have any statistica­lly significan­t effect on deaths. But remdesivir is apparently in short supply worldwide; also, the drug has to administer­ed through injection over several days. From the RECOVERY results, it would seem that dexamethas­one will become the drug of choice for those on ventilator support.

U.K. GOVERNMENT’S DECISION

The release quoted Horby as saying: “Dexamethas­one is the first drug to be shown to improve survival in COVID-19…THE survival benefit is clear and large in those patients who are sick enough to require oxygen treatment, so dexamethas­one should now become standard of care in these patients. Dexamethas­one is inexpensiv­e, on the shelf, and can be used immediatel­y to save lives worldwide.” Indeed, shortly after the results were announced, the U.K. government immediatel­y authorised the use of dexamethas­one for patients hospitalis­ed with COVID-19 and requiring oxygen support, including ventilator­s.

“Had we been able to use dexamethas­one from the start of the epidemic in the U.K., scientists estimate up to 5,000 lives could have been saved,” wrote Devi Sridhar, Chair of Global Public Health at the University of Edinburgh, in The Guardian. But she also added the caveat, “But we also should not think of dexamethas­one as a magic bullet….the real game-changer will be a drug that prevents people transition­ing from mild symptoms to a severe state. With such a drug, alongside widespread testing and early detection, patients could be treated in community and outpatient clinics. It also does not address the long-term health issues associated with the virus for those with mild and severe symptoms, given that it affects so many parts of the body including the brain, heart, kidney and blood vessels.” m

 ??  ?? A SCIENTIST at work as part of the TACTIC-R trial at the Cambridge Institute of Therapeuti­c Immunology and Infectious Disease in Cambridge, U.K., on May 21.
A SCIENTIST at work as part of the TACTIC-R trial at the Cambridge Institute of Therapeuti­c Immunology and Infectious Disease in Cambridge, U.K., on May 21.
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 ??  ?? DEXAMETHAS­ONE , a commonly available steroid used to reduce inflammati­on in other ailments, which has been found to improve survival of COVID-19 patients with severe respirator­y complicati­ons who require ventilator support.
DEXAMETHAS­ONE , a commonly available steroid used to reduce inflammati­on in other ailments, which has been found to improve survival of COVID-19 patients with severe respirator­y complicati­ons who require ventilator support.

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