Mortality outcomes with hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine in COVID-19 from an international collaborative meta-analysis of randomized trials

Cathrine Axfors,Andreas M. Schmitt,Perrine Janiaud,Janneke van’t Hooft,Sherief Abd-Elsalam,Ehab F. Abdo,Benjamin S. Abella,Javed Akram,Ravi K. Amaravadi,Derek C. Angus,Yaseen M. Arabi,Shehnoor Azhar,Lindsey R. Baden,Arthur W. Baker,Leila Belkhir,Thomas Benfield,Marvin A. H. Berrevoets,Cheng-Pin Chen,Tsung-Chia Chen,Shu-Hsing Cheng,Chien-Yu Cheng,Wei-Sheng Chung,Yehuda Z. Cohen,Lisa N. Cowan,Olav Dalgard,Fernando F. de Almeida e Val,Marcus V. G. de Lacerda,Gisely C. de Melo,Lennie Derde,Vincent Dubee,Anissa Elfakir,Anthony C. Gordon,Carmen M. Hernandez-Cardenas,Thomas Hills,Andy I. M. Hoepelman,Yi-Wen Huang,Bruno Igau,Ronghua Jin,Felipe Jurado-Camacho,Khalid S. Khan,Peter G. Kremsner,Benno Kreuels,Cheng-Yu Kuo,Thuy Le,Yi-Chun Lin,Wu-Pu Lin,Tse-Hung Lin,Magnus Nakrem Lyngbakken,Colin McArthur,Bryan J. McVerry,Patricia Meza-Meneses,Wuelton M. Monteiro,Susan C. Morpeth,Ahmad Mourad,Mark J. Mulligan,Srinivas Murthy,Susanna Naggie,Shanti Narayanasamy,Alistair Nichol,Lewis A. Novack,Sean M. O’Brien,Nwora Lance Okeke,Léna Perez,Rogelio Perez-Padilla,Laurent Perrin,Arantxa Remigio-Luna,Norma E. Rivera-Martinez,Frank W. Rockhold,Sebastian Rodriguez-Llamazares,Robert Rolfe,Rossana Rosa,Helge Røsjø,Vanderson S. Sampaio,Todd B. Seto,Muhammad Shahzad,Shaimaa Soliman,Jason E. Stout,Ireri Thirion-Romero,Andrea B. Troxel,Ting-Yu Tseng,Nicholas A. Turner,Robert J. Ulrich,Stephen R. Walsh,Steve A. Webb,Jesper M. Weehuizen,Maria Velinova,Hon-Lai Wong,Rebekah Wrenn,Fernando G. Zampieri,Wu Zhong,David Moher,Steven N. Goodman,John P. A. Ioannidis,Lars G. Hemkens

Nature Communications(2021)

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摘要
Substantial COVID-19 research investment has been allocated to randomized clinical trials (RCTs) on hydroxychloroquine/chloroquine, which currently face recruitment challenges or early discontinuation. We aim to estimate the effects of hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine on survival in COVID-19 from all currently available RCT evidence, published and unpublished. We present a rapid meta-analysis of ongoing, completed, or discontinued RCTs on hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine treatment for any COVID-19 patients (protocol: https://osf.io/QESV4/ ). We systematically identified unpublished RCTs (ClinicalTrials.gov, WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform, Cochrane COVID-registry up to June 11, 2020), and published RCTs (PubMed, medRxiv and bioRxiv up to October 16, 2020). All-cause mortality has been extracted (publications/preprints) or requested from investigators and combined in random-effects meta-analyses, calculating odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs), separately for hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine. Prespecified subgroup analyses include patient setting, diagnostic confirmation, control type, and publication status. Sixty-three trials were potentially eligible. We included 14 unpublished trials (1308 patients) and 14 publications/preprints (9011 patients). Results for hydroxychloroquine are dominated by RECOVERY and WHO SOLIDARITY, two highly pragmatic trials, which employed relatively high doses and included 4716 and 1853 patients, respectively (67% of the total sample size). The combined OR on all-cause mortality for hydroxychloroquine is 1.11 (95% CI: 1.02, 1.20; I² = 0%; 26 trials; 10,012 patients) and for chloroquine 1.77 (95%CI: 0.15, 21.13, I² = 0%; 4 trials; 307 patients). We identified no subgroup effects. We found that treatment with hydroxychloroquine is associated with increased mortality in COVID-19 patients, and there is no benefit of chloroquine. Findings have unclear generalizability to outpatients, children, pregnant women, and people with comorbidities.
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Epidemiology,Viral infection,Science,Humanities and Social Sciences,multidisciplinary
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