Shahed University

Intravenous methylprednisolone pulse as a treatment for hospitalised severe COVID-19 patients: results from a randomised controlled clinical trial

Mahdi Mahmoudi | Maryam Edalatifard | Maryam Akhtari | Mohammadreza Salehi | Zohre Naderi | Ahmadreza Jamshidi | Shayan Mostafaei | Seyed Reza Najafizadeh | Elham Farhadi | Nooshin Jalili | Masoud Esfahani | Besharat Rahimi | Hossein Kazemzadeh | Maedeh Mahmoodi Aliabadi | Tooba Ghazanfari | Mohammadreza Sattarian | Hourvash Ebrahimi Louyeh | Seyed Reza Raeeskarami | Saeidreza Jamalimoghadamsiahkali | Nasim Khajavirad

URL :   http://research.shahed.ac.ir/WSR/WebPages/Report/PaperView.aspx?PaperID=158822
Date :  2020/11/01
Publish in :    European Respiratory Journal
DOI :  https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.02808-2020
Link :  http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/13993003.02808-2020
Keywords :COVID-19 , respiratory system

Abstract :
Introduction: There are no determined treatment agents for severe COVID-19. It is suggested that methylprednisolone, as an immunosuppressive treatment, can reduce the inflammation of the respiratory system in COVID-19 patients. Methods: We conducted a single-blind, randomised controlled clinical trial involving severe hospitalised patients with confirmed COVID-19 at the early pulmonary phase of the illness in Iran. The patients were randomly allocated in a 1:1 ratio by the block randomisation method to receive standard care with methylprednisolone pulse (intravenous injection, 250 mg·day-1 for 3 days) or standard care alone. The study end-point was the time of clinical improvement or death, whichever came first. Primary and safety analysis was done in the intention-to-treat (ITT) population. Results: 68 eligible patients underwent randomisation (34 patients in each group) from April 20, 2020 to June 20, 2020. In the standard care group, six patients received corticosteroids by the attending physician before the treatment and were excluded from the overall analysis. The percentage of improved patients was higher in the methylprednisolone group than in the standard care group (94.1 versus 57.1) and the mortality rate was significantly lower in the methylprednisolone group (5.9 versus 42.9; p0.001). We demonstrated that patients in the methylprednisolone group had a significantly increased survival time compared with patients in the standard care group (log-rank test: p0.001; hazard ratio 0.293, 95 CI 0.154-0.556). Two patients (5.8) in the methylprednisolone group and two patients (7.1) in the standard care group showed severe adverse events between initiation of treatment and the end of the study. Conclusions: Our results suggest that methylprednisolone pulse could be an efficient therapeutic agent for hospitalised severe COVID-19 patients at the pulmonary phase.