BMC Infectious Diseases (May 2023)

Time from symptoms onset to remdesivir is associated with the risk of ICU admission: a multicentric analyses

  • Rodrigo Alonso-Navarro,
  • Margarita Ramírez,
  • Mar Masiá,
  • Roger Paredes,
  • Rocío Montejano,
  • Marina Povar-Echeverria,
  • Jordi Carratalà,
  • Miguel Salavert,
  • Enrique Bernal,
  • Carlos Dueñas,
  • Juan Flores,
  • Francisco Fanjul,
  • Isabel Gutiérrez,
  • Verónica Rico,
  • Lourdes Mateu,
  • Julen Cadiñanos,
  • Juan Berenguer,
  • Alex Soriano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-023-08222-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Shorter duration of symptoms before remdesivir has been associated with better outcomes. Our goal was to evaluate variables associated with the need of ICU admission in a cohort of hospitalized patients for COVID-19 under remdesivir including the period from symptoms onset to remdesivir. Methods We conducted a retrospective multicentric study analysing all patients admitted with COVID-19 in 9 Spanish hospitals who received treatment with remdesivir in October 2020. The main outcome was the need of ICU admission after 24 h of the first dose of remdesivir. Results In our cohort of 497 patients, the median of days from symptom onset to remdesivir was 5 days, and 70 of them (14.1%) were later admitted into ICU. The clinical outcomes associated with ICU admission were days from symptoms onset (5 vs. 6; p = 0.023), clinical signs of severe disease (respiratory rate, neutrophil count, ferritin levels and very-high mortality rate in SEIMC-Score) and the use of corticosteroids and anti-inflammatory drugs before ICU. The only variable significatively associated with risk reduction in the Cox-regression analyses was ≤ 5 days from symptoms onset to RDV (HR: 0.54, CI95%: 0.31–0.92; p = 0.024). Conclusion For patients admitted to the hospital with COVID-19, the prescription of remdesivir within 5 days from symptoms onset diminishes the need of ICU admission.

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