1 research outputs found
Baricitinib reduces 30âday mortality in older adults with moderateâtoâsevere COVIDâ19 pneumonia
Background: Older adults are at the highest risk of severe disease and death due to COVIDâ19. Randomized data have shown that baricitinib improves outcomes in these patients, but focused stratified analyses of geriatric cohorts are lacking. Our objective was to analyze the efficacy of baricitinib in older adults with COVIDâ19 moderateâtoâsevere pneumonia.Methods: This is a propensity score [PS]âmatched retrospective cohort study. Patients from the COVIDâAGE and AlbaâScore cohorts, hospitalized for moderateâtoâsevere COVIDâ19 pneumonia, were categorized in two age brackets of age <70âyears old (86 with baricitinib and 86 PSâmatched controls) or â„70âyears old (78 on baricitinib and 78 PSâmatched controls). Thirtyâday mortality rates were analyzed with KaplanâMeier and Cox proportional hazard models.ResultsMean age was 79.1 for those â„70âyears and 58.9 for those <70. Exactly 29.6% were female. Treatment with baricitinib resulted in a significant reduction in death from any cause by 48% in patients aged 70 or older, an 18.5% reduction in 30âday absolute mortality risk (n/N: 16/78 [20.5%] baricitinib, 30/78 [38.5%] in PSâmatched controls, pâ<â0.001) and a lower 30âday adjusted fatality rate (HR 0.21; 95% CI 0.09â0.47; pâ<â0.001). Beneficial effects on mortality were also observed in the age group <70 (8.1% reduction in 30âday absolute mortality risk; HR 0.14; 95% CI 0.03â0.64; p = 0.011).Conclusions: Baricitinib is associated with an absolute mortality risk reduction of 18.5% in adults older than 70âyears hospitalized with COVIDâ19 pneumonia.</p