JAMA - Journal of the American Medical Association, volume 327, issue 13, pages 1236

Effect of Sotrovimab on Hospitalization or Death Among High-risk Patients With Mild to Moderate COVID-19

Anil Gupta 1
Yaneicy Gonzalez-Rojas 2
Erick Juarez 3
Manuel Crespo Casal 4
Jaynier Moya 5
Diego Rodrigues Falci 6
Elias Sarkis 7
Joel Solis 8
Hanzhe Zheng 9
Nicola Scott 10
Andrea L. Cathcart 9
Sergio Parra 9
Jennifer E. Sager 9
Daren Austin 10
Amanda Peppercorn 11
Elizabeth Alexander 9
Wendy W. Yeh 9
Cynthia Brinson 12
Melissa Aldinger 9
Adrienne E. Shapiro 13, 14
Almena Free 15
Kimball Johnson 15
Edward Cordasco 15
Raymond Little 15
Ali Bajwa 15
Ankur Doshi 15
Augusto Focil 15
Rubaba (rubie) Hussain 15
Greg Bostick 15
Guillermo Somodevilla 15
Hasan Ali 15
John Kowalczyk 15
Shilpi Mittal 15
Jorge Caso 15
Marcy Goisse 15
Ladynez Espinal 15
Luis Zepeda 15
Thinh Nguyen 15
Luis Martinez 15
German Alvarez 15
Ronald Pucillo 15
Michael Seep 15
Naval Parikh 15
Victor Escobar 15
Armando Curra 15
Vinicius Dal Maso 15
John O’Mahony 15
Eduardo Ramacciotti 15
Jorge Diaz 15
Kleber Luz 15
Peter Ruane 15
Bharat Mochlera 15
Juan Roldan Sanchez 15
Luis Hernandez 15
Alfredo Fernandez 15
Glenn Leavitt 15
Masoud Azizad 15
Haider Afzal 15
Adil Fatakia 15
Silvia Narejos Perez 15
Claudio Marcel Stadnik 15
Linda Gorgos 15
Yessica Sachdeva 15
Patricia Segura 15
Carlos Quandros 15
Russell Perry 15
Lawrence Sher 15
Show full list: 67 authors
1
 
Albion Finch Medical, William Osler Health Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
2
 
Optimus U Corp, Miami, Florida
3
 
Florida International Medical Research, Miami
4
 
Álvaro Cunqueiro Hospital, IIS Galicia Sur, Vigo, Pontevedra, Spain
5
 
Pines Care Research Center, Pembroke Pines, Florida
6
 
Hospital De Clínicas de Porto Alegre, Porto Alegre, Brazil
7
 
Sarkis Clinical Trials, Gainesville, Florida
8
 
Centex Studies, McAllen, Texas
9
 
Vir Biotechnology Inc, San Francisco, California
11
 
GlaxoSmithKline, Cambridge, Massachusetts
12
 
Central Texas Clinical Research, Austin
15
 
for the COMET-ICE Investigators
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2022-04-05
scimago Q1
SJR5.928
CiteScore48.2
Impact factor63.1
ISSN00029955, 00987484, 15383598
General Medicine
Abstract
Older patients and those with comorbidities who are infected with SARS-CoV-2 may be at increased risk of hospitalization and death. Sotrovimab is a neutralizing antibody for the treatment of high-risk patients to prevent COVID-19 progression.To evaluate the efficacy and adverse events of sotrovimab in preventing progression of mild to moderate COVID-19 to severe disease.Randomized clinical trial including 1057 nonhospitalized patients with symptomatic, mild to moderate COVID-19 and at least 1 risk factor for progression conducted at 57 sites in Brazil, Canada, Peru, Spain, and the US from August 27, 2020, through March 11, 2021; follow-up data were collected through April 8, 2021.Patients were randomized (1:1) to an intravenous infusion with 500 mg of sotrovimab (n = 528) or placebo (n = 529).The primary outcome was the proportion of patients with COVID-19 progression through day 29 (all-cause hospitalization lasting >24 hours for acute illness management or death); 5 secondary outcomes were tested in hierarchal order, including a composite of all-cause emergency department (ED) visit, hospitalization of any duration for acute illness management, or death through day 29 and progression to severe or critical respiratory COVID-19 requiring supplemental oxygen or mechanical ventilation.Enrollment was stopped early for efficacy at the prespecified interim analysis. Among 1057 patients randomized (median age, 53 years [IQR, 42-62], 20% were ≥65 years of age, and 65% Latinx), the median duration of follow-up was 103 days for sotrovimab and 102 days for placebo. All-cause hospitalization lasting longer than 24 hours or death was significantly reduced with sotrovimab (6/528 [1%]) vs placebo (30/529 [6%]) (adjusted relative risk [RR], 0.21 [95% CI, 0.09 to 0.50]; absolute difference, -4.53% [95% CI, -6.70% to -2.37%]; P < .001). Four of the 5 secondary outcomes were statistically significant in favor of sotrovimab, including reduced ED visit, hospitalization, or death (13/528 [2%] for sotrovimab vs 39/529 [7%] for placebo; adjusted RR, 0.34 [95% CI, 0.19 to 0.63]; absolute difference, -4.91% [95% CI, -7.50% to -2.32%]; P < .001) and progression to severe or critical respiratory COVID-19 (7/528 [1%] for sotrovimab vs 28/529 [5%] for placebo; adjusted RR, 0.26 [95% CI, 0.12 to 0.59]; absolute difference, -3.97% [95% CI, -6.11% to -1.82%]; P = .002). Adverse events were infrequent and similar between treatment groups (22% for sotrovimab vs 23% for placebo); the most common events were diarrhea with sotrovimab (n = 8; 2%) and COVID-19 pneumonia with placebo (n = 22; 4%).Among nonhospitalized patients with mild to moderate COVID-19 and at risk of disease progression, a single intravenous dose of sotrovimab, compared with placebo, significantly reduced the risk of a composite end point of all-cause hospitalization or death through day 29. The findings support sotrovimab as a treatment option for nonhospitalized, high-risk patients with mild to moderate COVID-19, although efficacy against SARS-CoV-2 variants that have emerged since the study was completed is unknown.ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04545060.
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