Boston: Anti-inflammatory drug ‘tocilizumab’ has been shown to reduce mortality by 30 per cent among critically ill COVID-19 patients. This happens when the drug ‘tocilizumab’ is administered within the first two days of hospitalization. This is according to a study led by an Indian-origin researcher in the US. Unlike steroids, which suppress the immune system more broadly, ‘tocilizumab’ specifically inhibits the receptor for the pro-inflammatory cytokine, IL-6.
The researchers were led by Shruti Gupta and David E Leaf from Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women’s Hospital. They investigated the effects of the ‘tocilizumab’ on critically ill patients with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19. They found that when tocilizumab was administered within the first two days of ICU admission, there was a 30 per cent relative decrease in mortality compared to patients whose treatment did not include early use of ‘tocilizumab’.
“Tocilizumab has been used for several years to treat a condition known as cytokine release syndrome. This syndrome can be observed in cancer patients receiving certain types of immunotherapy,” said Leaf. He is the senior author of the study published in the journal ‘JAMA Internal Medicine’.
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“In the setting of COVID-19, it has been observed that much of the morbidity and mortality that occurs may be due to our own body’s inflammatory response to the virus as opposed to the virus itself,” Leaf added.
Tocilizumab is currently approved to treat rheumatoid arthritis and giant cell arteritis, an inflammatory condition affecting large blood vessels.
The study utilised data accumulated from over 4,000 critically ill patients with COVID-19 admitted to ICUs at 68 sites across the US. Of the 3,924 patients included in the analysis, 433 received tocilizumab in the first two days of ICU admission.
The risk of death at 30-days was 27.5 and 37.1 per cent among tocilizumab-treated and non-tocilizumab-treated patients, respectively, the researchers said.
The beneficial effect of’ tocilizumab’ on survival was consistent across categories of age, sex, and illness severity, and was also observed in patients who either did or did not receive corticosteroids, they said.
“Though there are conflicting data from clinical trials regarding the efficacy of ‘tocilizumab’ in COVID-19, our study differs from these trials in several important ways,” said Gupta, lead author of the study.
“We specifically focused on critically ill patients. We focused on early use of ‘tocilizumab’ (defined as the first two days of ICU admission), and we included a much larger number of patients (4,000 compared to approximately 400),” Gupta added.