Author: Khera, Rohan; Clark, Callahan; Lu, Yuan; Guo, Yinglong; Ren, Sheng; Truax, Brandon; Spatz, Erica S.; Murugiah, Karthik; Lin, Zhenqiu; Omer, Saad B.; Vojta, Deneen; Krumholz, Harlan M.
Title: Association of Angiotensinâ€Converting Enzyme Inhibitors and Angiotensin Receptor Blockers With the Risk of Hospitalization and Death in Hypertensive Patients With COVIDâ€19 Cord-id: fotlpdpo Document date: 2021_6_16
ID: fotlpdpo
Snippet: BACKGROUND: Despite its clinical significance, the risk of severe infection requiring hospitalization among outpatients with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection who receive angiotensinâ€converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) remains uncertain. METHODS AND RESULTS: In a propensity score–matched outpatient cohort (January–May 2020) of 2263 Medicare Advantage and commercially insured individuals with hypertension and a positive outpati
Document: BACKGROUND: Despite its clinical significance, the risk of severe infection requiring hospitalization among outpatients with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection who receive angiotensinâ€converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) remains uncertain. METHODS AND RESULTS: In a propensity score–matched outpatient cohort (January–May 2020) of 2263 Medicare Advantage and commercially insured individuals with hypertension and a positive outpatient SARSâ€CoVâ€2, we determined the association of ACE inhibitors and ARBs with COVIDâ€19 hospitalization. In a concurrent inpatient cohort of 7933 hospitalized with COVIDâ€19, we tested their association with inâ€hospital mortality. The robustness of the observations was assessed in a contemporary cohort (May–August). In the outpatient study, neither ACE inhibitors (hazard ratio [HR], 0.77; 0.53–1.13, P=0.18) nor ARBs (HR, 0.88; 0.61–1.26, P=0.48) were associated with hospitalization risk. ACE inhibitors were associated with lower hospitalization risk in the older Medicare group (HR, 0.61; 0.41–0.93, P=0.02), but not the younger commercially insured group (HR, 2.14; 0.82–5.60, P=0.12; Pâ€interaction 0.09). Neither ACE inhibitors nor ARBs were associated with lower hospitalization risk in either population in the validation cohort. In the primary inpatient study cohort, neither ACE inhibitors (HR, 0.97; 0.81–1.16; P=0.74) nor ARBs (HR, 1.15; 0.95–1.38, P=0.15) were associated with inâ€hospital mortality. These observations were consistent in the validation cohort. CONCLUSIONS: ACE inhibitors and ARBs were not associated with COVIDâ€19 hospitalization or mortality. Despite early evidence for a potential association between ACE inhibitors and severe COVIDâ€19 prevention in older individuals, the inconsistency of this observation in recent data argues against a role for prophylaxis.
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