IL-6 inhibition in the treatment of COVID-19: A meta-analysis and meta-regression - 25/04/21

Highlights |
• | Multiple RCTs of IL-6 inhibitors in the treatment of COVID-19 have been published, with conflicting conclusions. |
• | Our meta-analysis of nine RCTs demonstrated improvements in 28-day mortality in favour of IL-6 inhibition over comparators. |
• | Variability across study mortality rates were explained by individual and country-level predictors using meta-regression. |
• | These findings support the use of IL-6 inhibitors for the treatment of severe, hospitalised COVID-19. |
• | Long-term benefits of IL-6 inhibition and implications for differing standards of care are currently unknown. |
Summary |
Objectives |
Multiple RCTs of interleukin-6 (IL-6) inhibitors in COVID-19 have been published, with conflicting conclusions. We performed a meta-analysis to assess the impact of IL-6 inhibition on mortality from COVID-19, utilising meta-regression to explore differences in study results.
Methods |
Systematic database searches were performed to identify RCTs comparing IL-6 inhibitors (tocilizumab and sarilumab) to placebo or standard of care in adults with COVID-19. Meta-analysis was used to estimate the relative risk of mortality at 28 days between arms, expressed as a risk ratio. Within-study mortality rates were compared, and meta-regression was used to investigate treatment effect modification.
Results |
Data from nine RCTs were included. The combined mortality rate across studies was 19% (95% CI: 18, 20%), ranging from 2% to 31%. The overall risk ratio for 28-day mortality was 0.90 (95% CI: 0.81, 0.99), in favour of benefit for IL-6 inhibition over placebo or standard of care, with low treatment effect heterogeneity: I2 0% (95% CI: 0, 53%). Meta-regression showed no evidence of treatment effect modification by patient characteristics. Trial-specific mortality rates were explained by known patient-level predictors of COVID-19 outcome (male sex, CRP, hypertension), and country-level COVID-19 incidence.
Conclusions |
IL-6 inhibition is associated with clinically meaningful improvements in outcomes for patients admitted with COVID-19. Long-term benefits of IL-6 inhibition, its effectiveness across healthcare systems, and implications for differing standards of care are currently unknown.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : COVID-19, IL-6, Tocilizumab, Sarilumab, Meta-analysis
Plan
Vol 82 - N° 5
P. 178-185 - mai 2021 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.