Login / Signup

2021 update of the EULAR points to consider on the use of immunomodulatory therapies in COVID-19.

Alessia AlunnoAurélie NajmPedro M MachadoHeidi BertheussenGerd-Rüdiger R BurmesterFrancesco CarubbiGabriele De MarcoRoberto GiacomelliOlivier HermineJohn Dudley IsaacsIsabelle Kone-PautCésar Magro-ChecaIain B McInnesPier Luigi MeroniLuca QuartuccioA V RamananManuel Ramos-CasalsJavier Rodríguez CarrioHendrik Schulze-KoopsTanja Alexandra StammSander W TasBenjamin TerrierDennis G McGonagleXavier Mariette
Published in: Annals of the rheumatic diseases (2021)
We updated 2 overarching principles and 12 PtC. Evidence was only available in moderate to severe and critical patients. Glucocorticoids alone or in combination with tocilizumab are beneficial in COVID-19 cases requiring oxygen therapy and in critical COVID-19. Use of Janus kinase inhibitors (baricitinib and tofacitinib) is promising in the same populations of severe and critical COVID-19. Anti-SARS-CoV-2 monoclonal antibodies and convalescent plasma may find application in early phases of the disease and in selected subgroups of immunosuppressed patients. There was insufficient robust evidence for the efficacy of other immunomodulators with further work being needed in relation to biomarker-based stratification for IL-1 therapy CONCLUSIONS: Growing evidence supports incremental efficacy of glucocorticoids alone or combined with tocilizumab/Janus kinase inhibitors in moderate to severe and critical COVID-19. Ongoing studies may unmask the potential application of other therapeutic approaches. Involvement of rheumatologists, as systemic inflammatory diseases experts, should be encouraged in clinical trials of immunomodulatory therapy in COVID-19.
Keyphrases