Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
https://hdl.handle.net/2445/181361
Title: | Real-Life Impact of Glucocorticoid Treatment in COVID-19 Mortality: A Multicenter Retrospective Study |
Author: | Muñoz Gómez, Ana Fernández Cruz, Ana Lavilla Olleros, Cristina Giner Galvañ, Vicente Ausín García, Cristina Wikman, Philip Bendala Estrada, Alejandro David Vargas Núñez, Juan Antonio Rubio Rivas, Manuel Laureiro, Jaime Fernández Bermúdez, Daniel Buonaiuto, Verónica A. Arenas de Larriva, Antonio P. Pascual Pérez, Maria de los Reyes Alcalá Pedrajas, José Nicolás Labirua-Iturburu Ruiz, Ane Hernández Milián, Almudena Gómez del Mazo, Marta Antequera, Beatriz Mella Pérez, Carmen Navas Alcántara, María Soto Delgado, Juan F. Gámez Mancera, Rosa M. Sardiña González, Cristina Meijide Míguez, Héctor Ramos-Rincón, José Manuel Gómez Huelgas, Ricardo On Behalf of the SEMI-COVID-19 Network |
Keywords: | COVID-19 Cortisona Mortalitat COVID-19 Cortisone Mortality |
Issue Date: | 13-Oct-2021 |
Publisher: | MDPI AG |
Abstract: | We aimed to determine the impact of steroid use in COVID-19 in-hospital mortality, in a retrospective cohort study of the SEMICOVID19 database of admitted patients with SARS-CoV-2 laboratory-confirmed pneumonia from 131 Spanish hospitals. Patients treated with corticosteroids were compared to patients not treated with corticosteroids; and adjusted using a propensity-score for steroid treatment. From March-July 2020, 5.262 (35.26%) were treated with corticosteroids and 9.659 (64.73%) were not. In-hospital mortality overall was 20.50%; it was higher in patients treated with corticosteroids than in controls (28.5% versus 16.2%, OR 2.068 [95% confidence interval; 1.908 to 2.242]; p = 0.0001); however, when adjusting by occurrence of ARDS, mortality was significantly lower in the steroid group (43.4% versus 57.6%; OR 0.564 [95% confidence interval; 0.503 to 0.633]; p = 0.0001). Moreover, the greater the respiratory failure, the greater the impact on mortality of the steroid treatment. When adjusting these results including the propensity score as a covariate, in-hospital mortality remained significantly lower in the steroid group (OR 0.774 [0.660 to 0.907], p = 0.002). Steroid treatment reduced mortality by 24% relative to no steroid treatment (RRR 0.24). These results support the use of glucocorticoids in COVID-19 in this subgroup of patients. |
Note: | Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10204678 |
It is part of: | Journal of Clinical Medicine, 2021, vol. 10, num. 20, p. 4678 |
URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/2445/181361 |
Related resource: | https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10204678 |
Appears in Collections: | Articles publicats en revistes (Institut d'lnvestigació Biomèdica de Bellvitge (IDIBELL)) |
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