Inhalation surfactant therapy in the integrated treatment of severe COVID-19 pneumonia
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Published:2020-10-26
Issue:9
Volume:98
Page:6-12
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ISSN:2542-1506
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Container-title:Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases
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language:
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Short-container-title:Tuberk. bolezni lëgk.
Author:
Bautin A. E.1ORCID, Avdeev S. N.2ORCID, Seyliev A. A.3ORCID, Shvechkova M. V.4ORCID, Merzhoeva Z. M.2ORCID, Trushenko N. V.2ORCID, Semenov A. P.1ORCID, Lapshin K. B.1ORCID, Rozenberg O. A.3ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Almazov National Medical Research Center 2. I.M. Sechenov First Moscow State Medical University (Sechenov University) 3. A.M. Granov Russian Research Center of Radiology and Surgical Technologies 4. Perinatal Center
Abstract
The objective: to evaluate the effectiveness of inhaled surfactant therapy in the integrated treatment of severe COVID-19 pneumonia in a multicenter prospective clinical trial of surfactant-BL.Subjects and methods. 122 patients with severe COVID-19-associated pneumonia treated in two treatment centers were enrolled in the study. All of them received antiviral, anticoagulant and anti-inflammatory therapy. 56 patients also received inhalation therapy with surfactant-BL (OOO Biosurf, St. Petersburg, Russia) at a dose of 1 mg/kg 2-3 times a day. The remaining 66 patients received no surfactant-BL inhalation. When included into the study, all patients were divided into two groups based on severity of the condition at the time of inclusion: 62 people (Group I) needed oxygen inhalation through a face mask with the flow of 6-8 L/min for hypoxemia correction (27 received surfactant therapy and 35 did not); other 60 patients (Group II) required non-invasive respiratory support (constant positive airway pressure, non-invasive mechanical ventilation, high-flow oxygen therapy), of them 29 received surfactant therapy, while 31 patients did not.Results. In Group I, switching to invasive mechanical ventilation was required for 3/27 (11.1%) patients who received surfactant therapy, and 10/35 (28.6%) who received no surfactant therapy (p = 0.085); lethality made 3/27 (11.1%) and 9/35 (25.7%) (p = 0.131), respectively. In Group II, among those who received surfactant therapy, 5/29 (17.2%) were switched to invasive mechanical ventilation and 18/31 (58.1%) among those who did not receive it (p = 0.001); lethality made 5/29 (17.2%) and 18/31 (58.1%) (p = 0.001), respectively. In the pooled group of 122 patients with severe COVID-19-associated pneumonia, 8 (14.3%) of 56 patients who received surfactant died, and 27 (40.9%) of 66 died among those who did not receive it, (p = 0.001).Conclusion: Inhalation surfactant therapy can reduce the frequency of switching patients to mechanical ventilation and statistically significantly reduce lethality caused by severe pneumonia associated with SARS-CoV-2.
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