Hydrocortisone for COVID-19 and Severe Hypoxia : Low-dose Hydrocortisone in Patients With COVID-19 and Severe Hypoxia - the COVID STEROID Trial

Background: Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) has caused a pandemic of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) with many patients developing severe hypoxic respiratory failure. Many patients have died, and healthcare systems in several countries have been or will be overwhelmed because of a surge of patients needing hospitalisation and intensive care. There is no proven treatment for COVID-19; the care is supportive, including respiratory and circulatory support. For other patient groups with similar critical illness (acute respiratory disease syndrome and septic shock), corticosteroids are used because they reduce the duration of mechanical ventilation, length of stay in the intensive care unit, and potentially also mortality. Corticosteroids have been used in some patients with COVID-19, but the recommendations in clinical guidelines differ; some suggest their use, others against.Objectives: We aim to assess the effects of low-dose intravenous hydrocortisone on the number of days alive without life-support in adult patients with COVID-19 and severe hypoxia.Design: Multicentre, parallel-group, centrally randomised, stratified, blinded, clinical trial.Population: Adult patients with documented COVID-19 receiving at least 10 L/min of oxygen independent of delivery system OR mechanical ventilation.Experimental intervention: Continuous IV infusion of hydrocortisone 200 mg daily will be given for 7 days in addition to standard care.Control intervention: Continuous IV infusion of matching placebo (0.9% saline) will be given in addition to standard care (no corticosteroids).Outcomes: The primary outcome is days alive without life support (i.e. mechanical ventilation, circulatory support, or renal replacement therapy) at day 28. Secondary outcomes are serious adverse reactions (i.e. anaphylactic reaction to hydrocortisone, new episode of septic shock, invasive fungal infection or clinically important gastrointestinal bleeding); days alive without life support at day 90; days alive and out of hospital at day 90; all-cause mortality at day 28, day 90 and 1 year; and health-related quality of life at 1 year.Sample size: A total of 1000 participants will be randomised in order to detect a 15% relative reduction in 28-day mortality combined with a 10% reduction in time on life support among the survivors with a power of 85%..

Medienart:

Klinische Studie

Erscheinungsjahr:

2021

Erschienen:

2021

Enthalten in:

ClinicalTrials.gov - (2021) vom: 21. Sept. Zur Gesamtaufnahme - year:2021

Sprache:

Englisch

Links:

Volltext [kostenfrei]

Themen:

610
COVID-19
Hypoxia
Medical Condition: Covid-19, Hypoxia
Phase: Phase 3
Recruitment Status: Completed
Study Type: Interventional

Anmerkungen:

Source: Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record., First posted: April 16, 2020, Last downloaded: ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on October 04, 2021, Last updated: October 06, 2021

Study ID:

NCT04348305
RH-ITA-008
2020-001395-15

Veröffentlichungen zur Studie:

fisyears:

Förderinstitution / Projekttitel:

PPN (Katalog-ID):

CTG003361055