• BMJ · Sep 2020

    Practice Guideline

    A living WHO guideline on drugs for covid-19.

    • Bram Rochwerg, Reed Ac Siemieniuk, Thomas Agoritsas, François Lamontagne, Lisa Askie, Lyubov Lytvyn, Arnav Agarwal, Yee-Sin Leo, Helen Macdonald, Linan Zeng, Wagdy Amin, Erlina Burhan, Frederique Jacquerioz Bausch, Carolyn S Calfee, Maurizio Cecconi, Duncan Chanda, Bin Du, Heike Geduld, Patrick Gee, Nerina Harley, Madiha Hashimi, Beverly Hunt, Sushil K Kabra, Seema Kanda, Leticia Kawano-Dourado, Yae-Jean Kim, Niranjan Kissoon, Arthur Kwizera, Imelda Mahaka, Hela Manai, Greta Mino, Emmanuel Nsutebu, Natalia Pshenichnaya, Nida Qadir, Saniya Sabzwari, Rohit Sarin, Manu Shankar-Hari, Michael Sharland, Yinzhong Shen, Ranganathan Shalini Sri SS University of Colombo, Sri Lanka. Remdesivir, hydroxychloroquine, and lopinav, Joao P Souza, Miriam Stegemann, An De Sutter, Sebastian Ugarte, Sridhar Venkatapuram, Vu Quoc Dat, Dubula Vuyiseka, Ananda Wijewickrama, Brittany Maguire, Dena Zeraatkar, Jessica J Bartoszko, Long Ge, Romina Brignardello-Petersen, Andrew Owen, Gordon Guyatt, Janet Diaz, Michael Jacobs, and Per Olav Vandvik.
    • Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence and Impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada rochwerg@mcmaster.ca michael.jacobs@ucl.ac.uk.
    • BMJ. 2020 Sep 4; 370: m3379.

    Clinical QuestionWhat is the role of drug interventions in the treatment and prevention of covid-19?New RecommendationThe latest version of this WHO living guidance provides strong recommendations against the use of hydroxychloroquine and lopinavir-ritonavir in patients with covid-19 regardless of disease severity. These recommendations follow the publication of results from the WHO SOLIDARITY trialRecommendationsThis guidance adds to recommendations for corticosteroids and remdesivir published in the previous versions, with no changes made in this update: (a) a strong recommendation for systemic corticosteroids in patients with severe and critical covid-19, (b) a conditional recommendation against systemic corticosteroids in patients with non-severe covid-19, (c) a conditional recommendation against remdesivir in hospitalised patients with covid-19.How This Guideline Was CreatedWHO has partnered with the non-profit Magic Evidence Ecosystem Foundation (MAGIC) for methodologic support, to develop and disseminate living guidance for covid-19 drug treatments, based on a living systematic review and network analysis. An international standing Guideline Development Group (GDG) of content experts, clinicians, patients, and methodologists produced recommendations following standards for trustworthy guideline development using the GRADE approach. No competing interests were identified for any panel member.Understanding The New RecommendationWhen moving from the to the strong recommendations against the use of hydroxychloroquine and lopinavir-ritonavir in patients with covid-19, the panel was informed by a living systematic review and network meta-analysis of 30 trials with 10 921 participants for hydroxychloroquine and seven trials with 7429 participants for lopinavir-ritonavir. The trials for both drugs included inpatients and outpatients. Moderate certainty evidence for both drugs demonstrated no reduction in mortality or need for mechanical ventilation. There was also low certainty of evidence for harm with both drugs, including diarrhoea and nausea/vomiting. The panel did not anticipate important variability when it comes to patient values and preferences. In addition, the panel decided that contextual factors such as resources, feasibility, acceptability, and equity for countries and health care systems did not alter the recommendation.UpdatesThis is a living guideline. It replaces earlier versions (4 September and 20 November 2020) and supersedes the BMJ Rapid Recommendations on remdesivir published on 2 July 2020. The previous versions can be found as data supplements. New recommendations will be published as updates to this guideline.Readers' NoteThis is the third version (update 2) of the living guideline (BMJ 2020;370:m3379). When citing this article, please consider adding the update number and date of access for clarity.Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.

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