Medicine Advances (Mar 2023)

Should Paxlovid be prescribed for patients with severe COVID‐19 in the late course of infection? A case report

  • Qiang Li,
  • Yibo He,
  • Jin Liu,
  • Xiaozhao Lu,
  • Ziyou Zhou,
  • Yu Kang,
  • Wanying Wu,
  • Jielan Wu,
  • Feng Wang,
  • Yinghao Sun,
  • Wei Wang,
  • Chengyi Hui,
  • Wenting Wei,
  • Miaoyun Wen,
  • Jingjing Chen,
  • Yong Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/med4.12
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 1
pp. 92 – 96

Abstract

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Abstract The infection of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) is often accompanied by pneumonia with both high incidence and mortality. Paxlovid is commonly prescribed in patients with mild and normal pneumonia within 5 days from the symptom onset. Herein, we report a practically effective use of Paxlovid compensatively in patients with COVID‐19 and severe pneumonia after 5 days of infection in a typical case in China. In this case, a 75‐year‐old man was diagnosed with severe COVID‐19 complicated with a pulmonary bacterial infection. After treatment with oxygen inhalation, Cefoperazone‐sulbactam and ambroxol, fever and upper respiratory symptoms were alleviated, except for the Oxygenation index (OI) remaining worse, Coronavirus was detected as positive, and levels of interleukin‐6 remained high. Paxlovid was prescribed for 5 days subsequently though it was 14 days since symptom onset. Thereafter, the nucleic acid of the patient turned negative in 7 days and the symptoms resolved. This case showed that Paxlovid can be considered in patients with COVID‐19 and severe pneumonia even in the later course of infection in clinical practice in China.

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