The relationship between viral clearance rates and disease progression in early symptomatic COVID-19: a systematic review and meta-regression analysis

Author:

Singh Shivani1ORCID,Boyd Simon12ORCID,Schilling William H K12,Watson James A23,Mukaka Mavuto12,White Nicholas J12

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit, Mahidol University , Bangkok , Thailand

2. Nuffield Department of Medicine, Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Oxford University , Oxford , UK

3. Biostatistics Department, Oxford University Clinical Research Unit , 764 Vo Van Kiet, Quan 5, Ho Chi Minh City , Vietnam

Abstract

Abstract Background Effective antiviral drugs accelerate viral clearance in acute COVID-19 infections; the relationship between accelerating viral clearance and reducing severe clinical outcomes is unclear. Methods A systematic review was conducted of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of antiviral therapies in early symptomatic COVID-19, where viral clearance data were available. Treatment benefit was defined clinically as the relative risk of hospitalization/death during follow-up (≥14 days), and virologically as the SARS-CoV-2 viral clearance rate ratio (VCRR). The VCRR is the ratio of viral clearance rates between the intervention and control arms. The relationship between the clinical and virological treatment effects was assessed by mixed-effects meta-regression. Results From 57 potentially eligible RCTs, VCRRs were derived for 44 (52 384 participants); 32 had ≥1 clinical endpoint in each arm. Overall, 9.7% (R2) of the variation in clinical benefit was explained by variation in VCRRs with an estimated linear coefficient of −0.92 (95% CI: −1.99 to 0.13; P = 0.08). However, this estimate was highly sensitive to the inclusion of the recent very large PANORAMIC trial. Omitting this outlier, half the variation in clinical benefit (R2 = 50.4%) was explained by variation in VCRRs [slope −1.47 (95% CI −2.43 to −0.51); P = 0.003], i.e. higher VCRRs were associated with an increased clinical benefit. Conclusion Methods of determining viral clearance in COVID-19 studies and the relationship to clinical outcomes vary greatly. As prohibitively large sample sizes are now required to show clinical treatment benefit in antiviral therapeutic assessments, viral clearance is a reasonable surrogate endpoint.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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