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Practice Guideline
. 2020 Sep 4:370:m3379.
doi: 10.1136/bmj.m3379.

A living WHO guideline on drugs for covid-19

Arnav Agarwal  1   2   3   4 Beverly Hunt  5 Miriam Stegemann  6 Bram Rochwerg  1   2   4 François Lamontagne  7   4 Reed Ac Siemieniuk  1   2   4 Thomas Agoritsas  1   3   8   4 Lisa Askie  9   4 Lyubov Lytvyn  1   4 Yee-Sin Leo  10 Helen Macdonald  11   4 Linan Zeng  1   4 A Alhadyan  12 Al-Maslamani Muna  13 Wagdy Amin  14 André Ricardo Araujo da Silva  15 Diptesh Aryal  16 Fabian AJ Barragan  17 Frederique Jacquerioz Bausch  18 Erlina Burhan  19 Carolyn S Calfee  20 Maurizio Cecconi  21 Binila Chacko  22 Duncan Chanda  23 Vu Quoc Dat  24 An De Sutter  25 Bin Du  26 Stephen Freedman  27 Heike Geduld  28 Patrick Gee  29 Muhammad Haider  30 Matthias Gotte  31 Nerina Harley  32 Madiha Hashimi  33 David Hui  34 Mohamed Ismail  35 Fyezah Jehan  35 Sushil K Kabra  36 Seema Kanda  37 Yae-Jean Kim  38 Niranjan Kissoon  39 Sanjeev Krishna  40 Krutika Kuppalli  9 Arthur Kwizera  41 Marta Lado Castro-Rial  9   4 Thiago Lisboa  42 Rakesh Lodha  42 Imelda Mahaka  43 Hela Manai  44 Marc Mendelson  45 Giovanni Battista Migliori  46 Greta Mino  47 Emmanuel Nsutebu  48 Jessica Peter  49 Jacobus Preller  9   4 Natalia Pshenichnaya  50 Nida Qadir  51 Shalini Sri Ranganathan  52 Pryanka Relan  9   4 Jamie Rylance  9   4 Saniya Sabzwari  53 Rohit Sarin  54 Manu Shankar-Hari  6 Michael Sharland  55 Yinzhong Shen  56 Joao P Souza  57 Ronald Swanstrom  58 Tshokey Tshokey  59 Sebastian Ugarte  60 Timothy Uyeki  61 Vazquez Curiel Evangelina  61 Sridhar Venkatapuram  62 Dubula Vuyiseka  63 Ananda Wijewickrama  64 Lien Tran  60   4 Dena Zeraatkar  1   4 Jessica J Bartoszko  1   4 Long Ge  1   61   4 Romina Brignardello-Petersen  1   4 Andrew Owen  62   4 Gordon Guyatt  1   2   4   65 Janet Diaz  7   4   65 Leticia Kawano-Dourado  63 Michael Jacobs  66   65 Per Olav Vandvik  3   13   64   4   65
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Practice Guideline

A living WHO guideline on drugs for covid-19

Arnav Agarwal et al. BMJ. .

Erratum in

Update in

Abstract

Updates: This is the fourteenth version (thirteenth update) of the living guideline, replacing earlier versions (available as data supplements). New recommendations will be published as updates to this guideline.

Clinical question: What is the role of drugs in the treatment of patients with covid-19?

Context: The evidence base for therapeutics for covid-19 is evolving with numerous randomised controlled trials (RCTs) recently completed and underway. Emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants and subvariants are changing the role of therapeutics.

What is new?: The guideline development group (GDG) defined 1.5% as a new threshold for an important reduction in risk of hospitalisation in patients with non-severe covid-19. Combined with updated baseline risk estimates, this resulted in stratification into patients at low, moderate, and high risk for hospitalisation. New recommendations were added for moderate risk of hospitalisation for nirmatrelvir/ritonavir, and for moderate and low risk of hospitalisation for molnupiravir and remdesivir. New pharmacokinetic evidence was included for nirmatrelvir/ritonavir and molnupiravir, supporting existing recommendations for patients at high risk of hospitalisation. The recommendation for ivermectin in patients with non-severe illness was updated in light of additional trial evidence which reduced the high degree of uncertainty informing previous guidance. A new recommendation was made against the antiviral agent VV116 for patients with non-severe and with severe or critical illness outside of randomised clinical trials based on one RCT comparing the drug with nirmatrelvir/ritonavir. The structure of the guideline publication has also been changed; recommendations are now ordered by severity of covid-19.

About this guideline: This living guideline from the World Health Organization (WHO) incorporates new evidence to dynamically update recommendations for covid-19 therapeutics. The GDG typically evaluates a therapy when the WHO judges sufficient evidence is available to make a recommendation. While the GDG takes an individual patient perspective in making recommendations, it also considers resource implications, acceptability, feasibility, equity, and human rights. This guideline was developed according to standards and methods for trustworthy guidelines, making use of an innovative process to achieve efficiency in dynamic updating of recommendations. The methods are aligned with the WHO Handbook for Guideline Development and according to a pre-approved protocol (planning proposal) by the Guideline Review Committee (GRC). A box at the end of the article outlines key methodological aspects of the guideline process. MAGIC Evidence Ecosystem Foundation provides methodological support, including the coordination of living systematic reviews with network meta-analyses to inform the recommendations. The full version of the guideline is available online in MAGICapp and in PDF on the WHO website, with a summary version here in The BMJ. These formats should facilitate adaptation, which is strongly encouraged by WHO to contextualise recommendations in a healthcare system to maximise impact.

Future recommendations: Recommendations on anticoagulation are planned for the next update to this guideline. Updated data regarding systemic corticosteroids, azithromycin, favipiravir and umefenovir for non-severe illness, and convalescent plasma and statin therapy for severe or critical illness, are planned for review in upcoming guideline iterations.

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Conflict of interest statement

All GDG members have completed the WHO interest disclosure form. All authors have completed the BMJ Rapid Recommendations interest of disclosure form. The WHO, MAGIC and The BMJ judged that no GDG member or co-chair had any financial conflict of interest. Professional and academic interests are minimised as much as possible, while maintaining necessary expertise on the GDG to make fully informed decisions. MAGIC and TheBMJ assessed declared interests from other co-authors of this publication and found no relevant conflicts of interests.

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