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Baricitinib Treatment of Coronavirus Disease 2019 Is Associated With a Reduction in Secondary Infections.

2023 May

Journal Article

Authors:
Sweeney, D.A.; Tuyishimire, B.; Ahuja, N.; Beigel, J.H.; Beresnev, T.; Cantos, V.D.; Castro, J.G.; Cohen, S.H.; Cross, K.; Dodd, L.E.; Erdmann, N.; Fung, M.; Ghazaryan, V.; George, S.L.; Grimes, K.A.; Hynes, N.A.; Julian, K.G.; Kandiah, S.; Kim, H.Jang; Levine, C.B.; Lindholm, D.A.; Lye, D.C.; Maves, R.C.; Oh, M.D.; Paules, C.; Rapaka, R.R.; Short, W.R.; Tomashek, K.M.; Wolfe, C.R.; Kalil, A.C.

Secondary:
Open Forum Infect Dis

Volume:
10

Pagination:
ofad205

Issue:
5

PMID:
37206623

URL:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37206623/

DOI:
10.1093/ofid/ofad205

Keywords:
baricitinib; COVID-19; secondary infections

Abstract:
We performed a secondary analysis of the National Institutes of Health-sponsored Adaptive COVID-19 Treatment Trial (ACTT-2) randomized controlled trial and found that baricitinib was associated with a 50% reduction in secondary infections after controlling for baseline and postrandomization patient characteristics. This finding provides a novel mechanism of benefit for baricitinib and supports the safety profile of this immunomodulator for the treatment of coronavirus disease 2019.

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