Nirmatrelvir/ritonavir in COVID-19 patients with haematological malignancies: a report from the EPICOVIDEHA registry

  • Jon Salmanton-García
  • Francesco Marchesi
  • Maria Gomes da Silva
  • Francesca Farina
  • Julio Dávila-Valls
  • Yavuz M Bilgin
  • Andreas Glenthøj
  • Iker Falces-Romero
  • Jaap Van Doesum
  • Jorge Labrador
  • Caterina Buquicchio
  • Shaimaa El-Ashwah
  • Verena Petzer
  • Jens Van Praet
  • Martin Schönlein
  • Michelina Dargenio
  • Gustavo-Adolfo Méndez
  • Stef Meers
  • Federico Itri
  • Antonio Giordano
  • László Imre Pinczés
  • Ildefonso Espigado
  • Zlate Stojanoski
  • Alberto López-García
  • Lucia Prezioso
  • Ozren Jaksic
  • Antonio Vena
  • Nicola S Fracchiolla
  • Tomás José González-López
  • Natasa Colović
  • Mario Delia
  • Barbora Weinbergerová
  • Monia Marchetti
  • Joyce Marques de Almeida
  • Olimpia Finizio
  • Caroline Besson
  • Monika M Biernat
  • Toni Valković
  • Tobias Lahmer
  • Annarosa Cuccaro
  • Irati Ormazabal-Vélez
  • Josip Batinić
  • Noemí Fernández
  • Nick De Jonge
  • Carlo Tascini
  • Amalia N Anastasopoulou
  • Rémy Duléry
  • Maria Ilaria Del Principe
  • Gaëtan Plantefeve
  • Mario Virgilio Papa
  • Marcio Nucci
  • Moraima Jiménez
  • Avinash Aujayeb
  • José-Ángel Hernández-Rivas
  • Maria Merelli
  • Chiara Cattaneo
  • Ola Blennow
  • Anna Nordlander
  • Alba Cabirta
  • Gina Varricchio
  • Maria Vittoria Sacchi
  • Raul Cordoba
  • Elena Arellano
  • Stefanie K Gräfe
  • Dominik Wolf
  • Ziad Emarah
  • Emanuele Ammatuna
  • Ditte Stampe Hersby
  • Sonia Martín-Pérez
  • Raquel Nunes Rodrigues
  • Laman Rahimli
  • Livio Pagano
  • Oliver A Cornely
  • EPICOVIDEHA registry

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Nirmatrelvir/ritonavir treatment decreases the hospitalisation rate in immunocompetent patients with COVID-19, but data on efficacy in patients with haematological malignancy are scarce. Here, we describe the outcome of nirmatrelvir/ritonavir treatment in a large cohort of the latter patients.

METHODS: This is a retrospective cohort study from the multicentre EPICOVIDEHA registry (NCT04733729) on patients with haematological malignancy, who were diagnosed with COVID-19 between January and September 2022. Patients receiving nirmatrelvir/ritonavir were compared to those who did not. A logistic regression was run to determine factors associated with nirmatrelvir/ritonavir administration in our sample. Mortality between treatment groups was assessed with Kaplan-Meier survival plots after matching all the patients with a propensity score. Additionally, a Cox regression was modelled to detect factors associated with mortality in patients receiving nirmatrelvir/ritonavir.

FINDINGS: A total of 1859 patients were analysed, 117 (6%) were treated with nirmatrelvir/ritonavir, 1742 (94%) were treated otherwise. Of 117 patients receiving nirmatrelvir/ritonavir, 80% had received ≥1 anti-SARS-CoV-2 vaccine dose before COVID-19 onset, 13% of which received a 2nd vaccine booster. 5% were admitted to ICU. Nirmatrelvir/ritonavir treatment was associated with the presence of extrapulmonary symptoms at COVID-19 onset, for example anosmia, fever, rhinitis, or sinusitis (aOR 2.509, 95%CI 1.448-4.347) and 2nd vaccine booster (aOR 3.624, 95%CI 1.619-8.109). Chronic pulmonary disease (aOR 0.261, 95%CI 0.093-0.732) and obesity (aOR 0.105, 95%CI 0.014-0.776) were not associated with nirmatrelvir/ritonavir use. After propensity score matching, day-30 mortality rate in patients treated with nirmatrelvir/ritonavir was 2%, significantly lower than in patients with SARS-CoV-2 directed treatment other than nirmatrelvir/ritonavir (11%, p = 0.036). No factor was observed explaining the mortality difference in patients after nirmatrelvir/ritonavir administration.

INTERPRETATION: Haematological malignancy patients were more likely to receive nirmatrelvir/ritonavir when reporting extrapulmonary symptoms or 2nd vaccine booster at COVID-19 onset, as opposed to chronic pulmonary disease and obesity. The mortality rate in patients treated with nirmatrelvir/ritonavir was lower than in patients with targeted drugs other than nirmatrelvir/ritonavir.

FUNDING: EPICOVIDEHA has received funds from Optics COMMIT (COVID-19 Unmet Medical Needs and Associated Research Extension) COVID-19 RFP program by GILEAD Science, United States (Project 2020-8223).

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN2589-5370
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 04.2023

Comment Deanary

© 2023 The Author(s).

PubMed 37041967