par Lingas, Guillaume;Néant, Nadège;Gaymard, Alexandre;Belhadi, Drifa;Peytavin, Gilles;Hites, Maya ;Staub, Thérèse;Greil, Richard;Paiva, Josél Artur;Poissy, Julien;Peiffer-Smadja, Nathan;Costagliola, Dominique;Yazdanpanah, Yazdan;Wallet, Florent;Gagneux-Brunon, Amandine;Mentré, France;Ader, Florence;Burdet, Charles;Guedj, Jeremie;Bouscambert-Duchamp, Maude
Référence Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy, 77, 5, page (1404-1412)
Publication Publié, 2022-05-01
Référence Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy, 77, 5, page (1404-1412)
Publication Publié, 2022-05-01
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : | Background: The antiviral efficacy of remdesivir in COVID-19 hospitalized patients remains controversial. Objectives: To estimate the effect of remdesivir in blocking viral replication. Methods: We analysed nasopharyngeal normalized viral loads from 665 hospitalized patients included in the DisCoVeRy trial (NCT 04315948; EudraCT 2020-000936-23), randomized to either standard of care (SoC) or SoC + remdesivir. We used a mathematical model to reconstruct viral kinetic profiles and estimate the antiviral efficacy of remdesivir in blocking viral replication. Additional analyses were conducted stratified on time of treatment initiation (≤7 or >7 days since symptom onset) or viral load at randomization (< or ≥3.5 log10 copies/104 cells). Results: In our model, remdesivir reduced viral production by infected cells by 2-fold on average (95% CI: 1.5-3.2-fold). Model-based simulations predict that remdesivir reduced time to viral clearance by 0.7 days compared with SoC, with large inter-individual variabilities (IQR: 0.0-1.3 days). Remdesivir had a larger impact in patients with high viral load at randomization, reducing viral production by 5-fold on average (95% CI: 2.8-25-fold) and the median time to viral clearance by 2.4 days (IQR: 0.9-4.5 days). Conclusions: Remdesivir halved viral production, leading to a median reduction of 0.7 days in the time to viral clearance compared with SoC. The efficacy was larger in patients with high viral load at randomization. |