Identification of Bradycardia Following Remdesivir Administration Through the US Food and Drug Administration American College of Medical Toxicology COVID-19 Toxic Pharmacovigilance Project

Author:

Devgun Jason M.1,Zhang Rongmei2,Brent Jeffrey3,Wax Paul45,Burkhart Keith2,Meyn Alison4,Campleman Sharan4,Abston Stephanie4,Aldy Kim45,Amirshahi Maryann6,Boyle Katherine6,Buchanan Jennie6,Carey Jennifer6,Heard Kennon6,Hendrickson Robert6,Kazzi Ziad6,Lavonas Eric6,Levine Michael6,Olives Travis6,Pizon Anthony6,Schimmel Jonathan6,Sharma Kapil6,Spyres Meghan6,Wiegand Timothy6,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, Missouri

2. Center for Drug Evaluation and Research Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, Maryland

3. Department of Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora

4. American College of Medical Toxicology, Phoenix, Arizona

5. Department of Emergency Medicine, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas

6. for the Toxicology Investigators Consortium FACT Study Group

Abstract

ImportanceThe rapid spread and mortality associated with COVID-19 emphasized a need for surveillance system development to identify adverse events (AEs) to emerging therapeutics. Bradycardia is a remdesivir infusion–associated AE listed in the US Food and Drug Administration–approved prescribing information.ObjectiveTo evaluate the magnitude and duration of bradycardic events following remdesivir administration.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsA multicenter cohort study of patients with recorded heart rate less than 60 beats per minute within 24 hours after administration of a remdesivir dose was conducted between November 23, 2020, and October 31, 2021. Participants included patients hospitalized with COVID-19 at 15 medical centers across the US. Patients excluded had AEs unrelated to bradycardia, AEs in addition to bradycardia, or first onset of bradycardia after 5 remdesivir doses.ExposuresRemdesivir administration.Main Outcomes and MeasuresLinear mixed-effect models for the minimum HR before starting remdesivir and within 24 hours of each dose included doses as fixed effects. Baseline covariates were age (≥65 years vs <65 years), sex (male vs female), cardiovascular disease history (yes vs no), and concomitant use of bradycardia-associated medications. The interactions between variables and doses were considered fixed-effects covariates to adjust models.ResultsA total of 188 patients were included in the primary analysis and 181 in the secondary analysis. The cohort included 108 men (57.4%); 75 individuals (39.9%) were non-Hispanic White and mean (SD) age was 61.3 (15.4) years. Minimum HR after doses 1 to 5 was lower than before remdesivir. Mean minimum HR was lowest after dose 4, decreasing by −15.2 beats per minute (95% CI, −17.4 to −13.1; P < .001) compared with before remdesivir administration. Mean (SD) minimum HR was 55.6 (10.2) beats per minute across all 5 doses. Of 181 patients included in time-to-event analysis, 91 had their first episode of bradycardia within 23.4 hours (95% CI, 20.1-31.5 hours) and 91 had their lowest HR within 60.7 hours (95% CI, 54.0-68.3 hours). Median time to first bradycardia after starting remdesivir was shorter for patients aged 65 years or older vs those younger than 65 years (18.7 hours; 95% CI, 16.8-23.7 hours vs 31.5 hours; 95% CI, 22.7-39.3 hours; P = .04). Median time to lowest HR was shorter for men vs women (54.2 hours; 95% CI, 47.3-62.0 hours vs 71.0 hours; 95% CI, 59.5-79.6 hours; P = .02).Conclusions and RelevanceIn this cohort study, bradycardia occurred during remdesivir infusion and persisted. Given the widespread use of remdesivir, practitioners should be aware of this safety signal.

Publisher

American Medical Association (AMA)

Subject

General Medicine

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