High-Dose vs. Low-Dose Dexamethasone in Patients With COVID-19: A Cohort Study in Rural Central America
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Authors
Montalvan-Sanchez, EleazarChambergo-Michilot, Diego
Rodriguez-Murillo, Aida A.
Brooks, Alexandra E.
Palacios-Argenal, Dairy
Rivera-Pineda, Shery
Ordonez-Montes, Jose
Estevez-Ramirez, Rosa
Riva-Moscoso, Adrian
Norwood, Dalton A.
Calderon-Rodriguez, Alex
Pineda-SanMartin, Elizabeth
Giron, Roberto
Rivera-Corrales, Luis
Carcamo-Murillo, Balduino
Garner, Orlando
Issue Date
2023-03-01Keywords
cohortcorticosteroids
COVID-19
Latin America
Latinos or Hispanic
Western Honduras
Low-dose dexamethasone
High-dose dexamethasone
Hypoxemic COVID-19 patients
Retrospective observational study
Hospital in Honduras
Oxygen therapy
Mortality
Invasive mechanical ventilation
Kaplan-Meier analysis
Clinical outcomes
Metadata
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Ainosco PressJournal
Journal of Acute MedicineDOI
https://doi.org/10.6705/j.jacme.202303_13(1).0005Additional Links
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37089670/Abstract
To compare the clinical outcomes of a low dose dexamethasone strategy vs. a high-dose dexamethasone strategy in hypoxemic COVID-19 patients. A retrospective observational study comparing low-dose (8 mg) and high-dose dexamethasone (24 mg) of COVID-19 patients admitted from September 1, 2020 to October 31, 2020 in a hospital in Honduras. We included 81 patients with confirmed COVID-19 who required oxygen therapy. The mean age was similar between groups (57.49 vs. 56.95 years). There were more male patients in the group of 24 mg (p = 0.01). Besides, patients on the 24 mg dose had more prevalence of hypertension (p = 0.052). More patients in the 24 mg group had a higher rate of invasive mechanical ventilation (15.00% vs. 2.56%, p = 0.058). When evaluating the association between the high dose group and outcomes, we find no significant association with mortality, nosocomial infections, high flow mask, invasive mechanical ventilation, or the need for vasopressors. We find no significant differences in the Kaplan–Meier analysis regarding the survival (log-rank p-value = 0.315). We did not find significant differences between the use of 24 mg and 8 mg of dexamethasone in hypoxemic COVID-19 patients.Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleRights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessLanguage
engISSN
22115587ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
https://doi.org/10.6705/j.jacme.202303_13(1).0005
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