1. Effects of two different dexamethasone dosing regimens on ventilator-free days and long-term mortality in COVID-19 patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS: the REMED randomized clinical trial
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Jan Maláska, Jan Stašek, Jan Máca, Martin Kutěj, František Duška, Petr Kafka, Olga Klementová, Lenka Doubravská, Jan Hruda, Marek Fencl, Tomáš Gabrhelík, Libor Číž, Jan Zatloukal, Jiří Pouska, Pavel Novotný, Martin Balík, Regina Demlová, Jana Kubátová, Jana Vinklerová, Karolína Grodová, Radka Štěpánová, Adam Svobodník, Milan Kratochvíl, Jozef Klučka, Petr Štourač, Mervyn Singer, and the REMED Study Group
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,ARDS ,Dexamethasone ,Randomized clinical trial ,Ventilator-free days ,Long-term outcomes ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Dexamethasone 6 mg in patients with severe COVID-19 has been shown to decrease mortality and morbidity. The effects of higher doses of corticosteroid, that would further increase anti-inflammatory effects, are uncertain. The objective of our study was to assess the effect of 20 mg dexamethasone vs. 6 mg dexamethasone intravenously in patients with moderate-to-severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and COVID-19. Methods In a multicenter, open-label, randomized trial conducted in nine hospitals in the Czech Republic, we randomized adult patients with ARDS and COVID-19 requiring high-flow oxygen, noninvasive or invasive mechanical ventilation to receive either intravenous high-dose dexamethasone (20 mg/day on days 1–5, 10 mg/day on days 6–10) or standard-dose dexamethasone (6 mg/d, days 1–10). The primary outcome was 28-day ventilator-free days. The five secondary outcomes were 60-day mortality, C-reactive protein dynamics, 14-day WHO (World Health Organization) Clinical Progression Scale score, adverse events and 90-day Barthel index. The long-term outcomes were 180- and 360-day mortality and the Barthel index. The planned sample size was 300, with interim analysis after enrollment of 150 patients. Results The trial was stopped due to a lack of recruitment, and the follow-up was completed in February 2023. Among 234 randomized patients of 300 planned patients, the primary outcome was available for 224 patients (110 high-dose and 114 standard-dose dexamethasone; median [interquartile range (IQR)] age, 59.0 [48.5–66.0] years; 130 [58.0%] were receiving noninvasive or invasive mechanical ventilation at baseline). The mean number of 28-day ventilator-free days was 8.9 (± 11.5) days for high-dose dexamethasone and 8.0 (± 10.7) days for standard-dose dexamethasone, with an absolute difference of + 0.81 days (95% CI − 2.12–3.73 days). None of the prespecified secondary outcomes, including adverse events, differed between the groups. Conclusions Despite not reaching its prespecified enrollment, there was no signal to either benefit or harm high-dose dexamethasone over standard-dose dexamethasone in patients with COVID-19 and moderate-to-severe ARDS. Trial registration Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04663555. Registered 10 December 2020, https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04663555?term=NCT04663555&rank=1 and EudraCT: 2020–005887-70.
- Published
- 2024
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