Volume 40, Issue 11 p. 1072-1081
Original Research Article

Hydroxychloroquine in Hospitalized Patients with COVID-19: Real-World Experience Assessing Mortality

Frank H. Annie

Frank H. Annie

Charleston Area Medical Center Health Education and Research Institute, Charleston, West Virginia, USA

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Cristian Sirbu

Cristian Sirbu

Charleston Area Medical Center Health Education and Research Institute, Charleston, West Virginia, USA

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Keely R. Frazier

Keely R. Frazier

Charleston Area Medical Center Health Education and Research Institute, Charleston, West Virginia, USA

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Mike Broce

Mike Broce

Charleston Area Medical Center Health Education and Research Institute, Charleston, West Virginia, USA

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B. Daniel Lucas Jr.

Corresponding Author

B. Daniel Lucas Jr.

Charleston Area Medical Center Health Education and Research Institute, Charleston, West Virginia, USA

Address for correspondence: B. Daniel Lucas Jr., CAMC Health Education and Research Institute, 3200 MacCorkle Avenue, Charleston, WV 25304; e-mail: [email protected].

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First published: 12 October 2020
Citations: 10
Conflict of interest: The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Abstract

Introduction

Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is presently being used off-label or within a clinical trial.

Objectives

We investigated a multinational database of patients with COVID-19 with real-world data containing outcomes and their relationship to HCQ use. The primary outcome was all-cause mortality within 30 days of follow-up.

Methods

This was a retrospective cohort study of patients receiving HCQ within 48 hours of hospital admission. Medications, preexisting conditions, clinical measures on admission, and outcomes were recorded.

Results

Among patients with a diagnosis of COVID-19 in our propensity-matched cohort, the mean ages ± SD were 62.3 ± 15.9 years (53.7% male) and 61.9 ± 16.0 years (53.0% male) in the HCQ and no-HCQ groups, respectively. There was no difference in overall 30-day mortality between the HCQ and no-HCQ groups (HCQ 13.1%, n=367; no HCQ 13.6%, n=367; odds ratio 0.95, 95% confidence interval 0.62–1.46) after propensity matching. Although statistically insignificant, the HCQ-azithromycin (AZ) group had an overall mortality rate of 14.6% (n=199) compared with propensity-matched no-HCQ–AZ cohort’s rate of 12.1% (n=199, OR 1.24, 95% CI 0.70–2.22). Importantly, however, there was no trend in this cohort’s overall mortality/arrhythmogenesis outcome (HCQ-AZ 17.1%, no HCQ–no AZ 17.1%; OR 1.0, 95% CI 0.6–1.7).

Conclusions

We report from a large retrospective multinational database analysis of COVID-19 outcomes with HCQ and overall mortality in hospitalized patients. There was no statistically significant increase in mortality and mortality-arrhythmia with HCQ or HCQ-AZ.