BACKGROUND The effectiveness of adjunctive corticosteroid use in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) remains inconclusive. AIM To investigate the effectiveness of adjunctive corticosteroid therapy in patients with severe COVID-19. METHODS We conducted a retrospective analysis of the difference in several outcomes between patients with severe COVID-19 who received corticosteroid therapy (the corticosteroid group) and patients with severe COVID-19 who did not receive corticosteroid therapy (the non-corticosteroid group). RESULTS Seventy-five patients were included in this study. Of these, 47 patients were in the corticosteroid group and 28 patients were in the non-corticosteroid group. There were no differences between the two groups in the total length of hospital stay, the length of intensive care unit stay, high-flow oxygen days, non-invasive ventilator days, invasive ventilation days, and mortality rate. Total lesion volume ratio, consolidation volume ratio and ground-glass opacity volume ratio in the corticosteroid group decreased significantly on day 14, while those in the noncorticosteroid group did not show a significant decrease. CONCLUSION Our results show that adjunctive corticosteroid use did not significantly improve clinical outcomes in severe COVID-19 patients, but might promote the absorption of pulmonary lesions. Larger multicenter randomized controlled studies may be needed to confirm this.
CITATION STYLE
Xiong, B., Du, H., Zhan, Z., Zhang, A., He, L. M., Qin, Y. Y., … Chen, Y. K. (2021). Effectiveness of adjunctive corticosteroid therapy in patients with severe COVID-19: A retrospective cohort study. World Journal of Clinical Cases, 9(15), 3546–3558. https://doi.org/10.12998/wjcc.v9.i15.3546
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