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Higher versus lower dose corticosteroids for severe to critical COVID-19: A systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis

Abstract

Purpose

Corticosteroids are standard of care for patients with severe COVID-19. However, the optimal dose is uncertain. We compare higher doses of corticosteroids with lower doses in patients with COVID-19.

Methods

We searched MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, MedRxiv, and Web of Science from inception to January 7, 2022, for trials that randomized patients with severe-to-critical COVID-19 to corticosteroids, standard care, or placebo. Reviewers, working in duplicate, screened references, extracted data, and assessed risk of bias using a modified version of the Cochrane risk of bias 2.0 tool. We performed a dose-response meta-analysis and used the GRADE framework to assess the certainty of evidence. We present our results in absolute risk difference (RD) per 1000 with 95% confidence intervals (CI).

Results

We included 19 trials, with 9,609 patients. We show that, compared to lower-dose corticosteroids, higher-dose corticosteroids probably reduce mortality (RD 14.8 fewer deaths per 1000 [95% CI 6.0 to 27.9 fewer]; moderate certainty), may reduce the need for mechanical ventilation (RD 10.4 fewer per 1000 [95% CI 19.2 fewer to 3.6 more]; low certainty) and may reduce risk of nosocomial infections (16.7 fewer infections per 1000 [95% CI 5.4 to 25.0 fewer]; low certainty).

Conclusions

Relatively higher doses of corticosteroids may be beneficial in patients with severe-to-critical COVID-19 without increasing the risk of nosocomial infections.

Authors

Pitre T; Su J; Mah J; Helmeczi W; Danhoe S; Plaxton W; Giilck S; Rochwerg B; Zeraatkar D

Publication date

March 23, 2022

DOI

10.21203/rs.3.rs-1479424/v1

Preprint server

Research Square

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Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

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