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Clinical efficacy and safety evaluation of favipiravir in treating patients with severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome

Yang Yuan, Qing‐Bin Lu, Wen-Si Yao, Jing Zhao, Xiao‐Ai Zhang, Ning Cui, Chun Yuan, Tong Yang, Xue‐Fang Peng, Shou‐Ming Lv, Jiachen Li, Yabin Song, Dongna Zhang, Li‐Qun Fang, Hongquan Wang, Hao Li, Wei Liu

2021EBioMedicine57 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is an emerging infectious disease with high mortality, however with no effective therapy available. METHODS: The effect of favipiravir (FPV) in treating SFTS was evaluated by an integrated analysis on data collected from a single-arm study (n=428), a surveillance study (n=2350) and published data from a randomized controlled trial study (n=145). A 1:1 propensity score matching was performed to include 780 patients: 390 received FPV and 390 received supportive therapy only. Case fatality rates (CFRs), clinical progress, and adverse effects were compared. FINDINGS: copies/mL. Age-stratified analysis revealed no benefit in the aging group >70 years, regardless of their sex, onset-to-admission interval, therapy duration or baseline viral load. However, for both ≤60 and 60-70 years groups, therapy duration and baseline viral load differentially affected FPV therapy efficiency. Hyperuricemia and thrombocytopenia, as the major adverse response of FPV usage, were observed in >70 years patients. INTERPRETATION: FPV was safe in treating SFTS patients but showed no benefit for those aged >70 years. Instant FPV therapy could highly benefit SFTS patients aged 60-70 years. FUNDING: China Natural Science Foundation (No. 81825019, 82073617 and 81722041) and China Mega-project for Infectious Diseases (2018ZX10713002 and 2015ZX09102022).

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSevere fever with thrombocytopenia syndromeViral loadCase fatality rateInternal medicineConfidence intervalAdverse effectOdds ratioFavipiravirPediatricsImmunologyDiseaseVirusInfectious disease (medical specialty)EpidemiologyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Viral Infections and VectorsMosquito-borne diseases and controlHematological disorders and diagnostics