Severe COVID-19 Pneumonia Clinical Trial
Official title:
ANTIcoagulation in Severe COVID-19 Patients: a Multicenter, Parallel-group, Open-label, Randomized Controlled Trial
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), a viral respiratory illness caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), may predispose patients to thrombotic disease due to a state of profound inflammation, platelet activation, and endothelial dysfunction leading to respiratory distress and increased mortality. The incidence of macrovascular thrombotic events varies from 10 to 30% in COVID-19 hospitalized patients depending on the type of arterial or vein thrombosis captured and severity of illness . Observational results in patients receiving routine low-dose prophylactic anticoagulation (LD-PA), several institutions have recently released guidance statement to prevent macrovascular thrombotic events with dose escalation anticoagulation. In these recommendations, high-dose prophylactic anticoagulation (HD-PA) and therapeutic anticoagulation (TA) can be employed either empirically or based on the body mass index and increased D-dimer values. No randomized trial has validated this approach, and other recent recommendations challenge this approach. Microvascular thrombotic events are also of major concern in critically ill patients with COVID-19, even in the absence of obvious macrovascular thrombotic events. A large review of autopsy findings in COVID-19-related deaths reported micro thrombi in small pulmonary vessels. More generally, COVID-19-induced endothelitis and coagulopathy across vascular beds of different organs lead to widespread microvascular thrombosis with microangiopathy and occlusion of capillaries. Thus, in severe COVID-19 patients requiring oxygen therapy without initial macrovascular thrombotic event, a HD-PA or a TA could be beneficial by limiting the extension of microvascular thrombosis and the evolution of the lung and multi-organ microcirculatory dysfunction. In a large observational cohort of 2,773 COVID-19 patients, a lower in-hospital mortality in ventilated patients receiving TA as compared to those receiving PA (29.1% vs. 62.7%). Our hypothesis is dual: i) first, that TA and HD-PA strategies mitigate microthrombosis and each limit the progression of COVID-19, including respiratory failure and multi-organ dysfunction, with in fine a decreased mortality and duration of disease, as compared to a low-dose PA; ii) second, that TA outperforms HD-PA in this setting.
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