Litcius/Paper detail

The efficacy of IL-6 inhibitor Tocilizumab in reducing severe COVID-19 mortality: a systematic review

Avi Kaye, Robert D. Siegel

2020PeerJ61 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In the absence of highly effective antiviral therapies against SARS-CoV-2, it is crucial to counter the known pathophysiological causes of severe COVID-19. Evaluating the efficacy existing drugs may expedite the development of such therapeutics. Severe COVID-19 is largely the result of a dysregulated immune response characterized by lymphocytopenia, neutrophilia and critical hypercytokinemia, or "cytokine storm," which is largely mediated by the cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6). The IL-6 inhibitor tocilizumab (TCZ) could potentially suppress the effects of the pro-inflammatory cytokine and thereby lower mortality from the disease. This systematic analysis aimed to investigate and synthesize existing evidence for the efficacy of TCZ in reducing COVID-19 mortality. METHODOLOGY: PubMed and SearchWorks searches were performed to locate clinical studies with primary data on TCZ treatment for severe COVID-19. Sixteen case-control studies comparing mortality between TCZ and standard of care (SOC) were identified for quantitative synthesis. The systematic analysis was pre-approved through PROSPERO (CRD42020193479). RESULTS: < 0.001). Additionally, 18 uncontrolled trials were identified for qualitative analysis producing a raw combined mortality rate of 16.0%. CONCLUSIONS: Important caveats to this research include the lack of prospective randomized control trials and the absence of data from the large COVATA study from the published literature. However, results from this systematic analysis of published research provide positive evidence for the potential efficacy of TCZ to treat severe COVID-19, validating the ethical basis and merit of ongoing randomized controlled clinical trials.

Topics & Concepts

TocilizumabMedicineOdds ratioCytokine stormCase fatality rateInternal medicineLymphocytopeniaMortality rateNeutrophiliaMeta-analysisCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)ImmunologyDiseaseLymphocyteEpidemiologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)COVID-19 Clinical Research StudiesPsoriasis: Treatment and PathogenesisImmune responses and vaccinations