COVER2: A Simple Approach to Prevent Hospitalization for COVID-19 Patients
Study Details
Study Description
Brief Summary
The newly recognised disease COVID-19 is caused by the Severe-Acute-Respiratory-Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), which rapidly spread globally in late 2019, reaching pandemic proportions. The clinical spectrum of SARS-CoV-2 infection is broad, encompassing asymptomatic infection, mild upper respiratory tract illness and mild extrapulmonary symptoms, and severe viral pneumonia with respiratory failure and even death.
Given the rising global death toll associated with the pandemic, in the last year we have witnessed a race to find drugs/biological treatments to save the lives of hospitalised, severely ill patients, as well as to develop vaccines. Nonetheless, to limit the number of hospitalisations and deaths due to severe illness, thus avoiding pushing hospitals to their limits and remarkably reducing the tremendous treatment costs for health care providers, it is crucial to also focus on primary care physicians and initial mild symptoms in COVID-19 patients at home.
As with other acute viral infections, early initiation of treatment for COVID-19 might improve clinical outcomes.
For COVID-19, most primary care physicians have initially treated their patients according to their judgment, with various treatment regimens they believe are most appropriate based on thier experience/expertise. We recently published a note on how we were treating patients at home based on the pathophysiologic and pharmacologic rationale and the available clinical evidence of efficacy in COVID-19 for each of the recommended class of drugs.
Because the common early mild symptoms of COVID-19 highlight a systemic inflammatory process, there is the recommendation of using anti-inflammatory agents to limit excessive host inflammatory responses to the viral infection, including non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and corticosteroids.
In a recent academic matched-cohort study, we found that early treatment of COVID-19 patients at home by their family doctors according to the proposed recommendation regimen almost completely prevented the need for hospital admission (the most clinically relevant outcome) due to progression toward more severe illness, compared to patients in the 'control' cohort who were treated at home according to their family physician's assessments. This translated into a reduction of over 90% in the overall numbers of days of hospitalisation and in related treatment costs. Treatment according to the recommended algorithm was safe and well tolerated. However, the rate of hospitalization was a secondary outcome of the study and the possibility of a casual finding cannot be definitely excluded. Thus, we have considered the observed reduction in patient hospitalization an hypothesis generating finding that provides a robust background for the present new cohort study primarily aimed to test the effect on this outcome of COVID-19 treatment at home according to the proposed recommendation algorithm.
No randomized clinical trials have been performed so far in COVID-19 patients to compare the effectiveness of different regimens targeting early symptoms at home. Comparative analysis of patient cohorts with long-enough follow-up in everyday clinical practice may offer a good alternative to randomized clinical trials to evaluate effectiveness of therapeutic interventions. Thus, we will use this approach to compare a cohort of COVID-19 patients treated at home by their family physicians according to the proposed recommendation algorithm with another cohort of similar COVID-19 patients treated by their family doctors with various treatment regimens they believe most appropriate based on their experience and expertise, and monitored longitudinally up to 3 months.
Our working hypothesis is that following the proposed recommendation algorithm the early COVID-19-related inflammatory process is limited, preventing the need of hospital admission at larger extent than with other therapeutic approaches also targeting early symptoms of the illness at home.
Condition or Disease | Intervention/Treatment | Phase |
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Study Design
Arms and Interventions
Arm | Intervention/Treatment |
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'Recommended algorithm' cohort COVID-19 patients treated at home by their family doctors according to the proposed recommendations |
Drug: Recommended treatment schedule
Relatively selective Cox-2 inhibitors, Corticosteroids (Dexamethasone), Anticoagulants (LMW heparin), Gentle oxygen therapy
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'Historic control' cohort COVID-19 patients enrolled in the ORIGIN study of the Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri IRCCS and treated at home by family physicians with drug regimens that are not necessarily guided by those proposed in the recommendations |
Drug: Control treatment schedule
Treatment regimens different from the recommended one according to family physician personal practice
|
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcome Measures
- Proportion of patients who require hospitalization [From beginning the proposed recommended treatments or other therapeutic regimens, assessed up to 60 days.]
Eligibility Criteria
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
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Male and female adult (≥18 years old)
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Subjects with early mild symptoms of COVID-19, who start the treatment without waiting results of a nasopharyngeal swab, if any
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Informed consent
Exclusion Criteria:
- Subjects of the two cohorts who require immediate hospital admission because of severe COVID-19 symptoms at onset according to family doctor's assessment
Contacts and Locations
Locations
Site | City | State | Country | Postal Code | |
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1 | ASL Teramo | Teramo | TE | Italy | 64100 |
2 | ATS Insubria | Varese | VA | Italy | 21100 |
Sponsors and Collaborators
- Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research
Investigators
None specified.Study Documents (Full-Text)
None provided.More Information
Publications
None provided.- COVER 2