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
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 type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2022-04-05
scimago Q1
SJR: 5.928
CiteScore: 48.2
Impact factor: 63.1
ISSN: 00029955, 00987484, 15383598
PubMed ID:
35285853
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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