1. Significant reduction in the incidence of non‐coronavirus infections in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia on ibrutinib and venetoclax treatment during the COVID‐19 pandemic: An additional benefit of lockdown.
- Author
-
Kislova, Maria, Petrenko, Andrei, Dmitrieva, Elena A., Milenkin, Alexander, Nikitin, Konstantin E., Ptushkin, Vadim V., Shabunin, Alexey V., and Nikitin, Eugene A.
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,CHRONIC lymphocytic leukemia ,COVID-19 treatment ,CORONAVIRUS diseases ,VENETOCLAX ,RESPIRATORY infections - Abstract
Effective treatment and prevention of infections challenge management of patients with chronic lymphicytic leukemia (CLL). The COVID‐19 pandemic resulted in the reduction of outpatient hospital visits as a part of non‐pharmaceutical interventions that could affect the incidence of infectious complications. Study enrolled patients with CLL receiving ibrutinib or/and venetoclax who were observed at the Moscow City Centre of Hematology from 01 April 2017 to 31 March 2021. We found a reduction in the incidence of infectious episodes after the implementation of the lockdown in Moscow in 01 April 2020, when compared to data on the year prior to the lockdown (p < 0.0001), as well as when compared to the predictive model (p = 0.02), and based on individual infection profiles using cumulative sums (p < 0.0001). Bacterial infections had 4.44‐fold decrease, bacterial in combination with undefined infections had 4.89‐fold decrease, viral infections had unsignificant changes. The decrease in the number of outpatient visits coincides with the time of the lockdown could be a likely factor, explaining a decline in the incidence of infection. Patients were clustered according incidence and severity of infectious episodes for subgroup mortality assessment. No differences in overall survival due to COVID‐19 were observed. Typical respiratory infections, bacterial and undefined, the transmission of which may be affected by patient‐to‐patient contact in the settings of out‐patient health care visits were decreased, possibly due to SARS‐CoV‐2 restrictive measures. A positive correlation between outpatient visits and the incidence of bronchial and upper respiratory tract infection points at the role of hospital‐acquired infection and attests to the necessity of reorganizing care for all patients with CLL. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF