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Intermediate- vs. Standard-Dose Prophylactic Anticoagulation in Patients With COVID-19 Admitted in Medical Ward: A Propensity Score-Matched Cohort Study

David M. Smadja, Guillaume Bonnet, Nicolas Gendron, Orianne Weizman, Lina Khider, Antonin Trimaille, Tristan Mirault, Charles Fauvel, Jean‐Luc Diehl, Delphine Mika, Aurélien Philippe, Théo Pezel, Guillaume Goudot, Willy Sutter, Benjamin Planquette, Victor Waldmann, Olivier Sanchez, Ariel Cohen, Richard Chocron

2021Frontiers in Medicine15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Microthrombosis and large-vessel thrombosis are the main triggers of COVID-19 worsening. The optimal anticoagulant regimen in COVID-19 patients hospitalized in medical wards remains unknown. Objectives: To evaluate the effects of intermediate-dose vs. standard-dose prophylactic anticoagulation (AC) among patients with COVID-19 hospitalized in medical wards. Methods and results: We used a large French multicentric retrospective study enrolling 2,878 COVID-19 patients hospitalized in medical wards. After exclusion of patients who had an AC treatment before hospitalization, we generated a propensity-score-matched cohort of patients who were treated with intermediate-dose or standard-dose prophylactic AC between February 26 and April 20, 2020 (intermediate-dose, n = 261; standard-dose prophylactic anticoagulation, n = 763). The primary outcome of the study was in-hospital mortality; this occurred in 23 of 261 (8.8%) patients in the intermediate-dose group and 74 of 783 (9.4%) patients in the standard-dose prophylactic AC group ( p = 0.85); while time to death was also the same in both the treatment groups (11.5 and 11.6 days, respectively, p = 0.17). We did not observe any difference regarding venous and arterial thrombotic events between the intermediate dose and standard dose, respectively (venous thrombotic events: 2.3 vs. 2.4%, p=0.99; arterial thrombotic events: 2.7 vs. 1.2%, p = 0.25). The 30-day Kaplan–Meier curves for in-hospital mortality demonstrate no statistically significant difference in in-hospital mortality (HR: 0.99 (0.63–1.60); p = 0.99). Moreover, we found that no particular subgroup was associated with a significant reduction in in-hospital mortality. Conclusion: Among COVID-19 patients hospitalized in medical wards, intermediate-dose prophylactic AC compared with standard-dose prophylactic AC did not result in a significant difference in in-hospital mortality.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePropensity score matchingCohortRegimenInternal medicineRetrospective cohort studyMedical recordThrombosisVenous thrombosisCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)SurgeryDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)COVID-19 Clinical Research StudiesCOVID-19 and healthcare impactsLong-Term Effects of COVID-19