Placing the results of the SOLIDARITY trial with regards to remdesivir in perspective


  Table of Contents     PERSPECTIVE Year : 2021  |  Volume : 38  |  Issue : 4  |  Page : 382-386  

Placing the results of the SOLIDARITY trial with regards to remdesivir in perspective

Debdipta Bose1, Nithya Jaideep Gogtay1, Sujeet K Rajan2
1 Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Seth GS Medical College and KEM Hospital, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
2 Department of Chest Medicine, Bombay Hospital and Research Center, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India

Date of Submission18-Nov-2020Date of Acceptance22-Mar-2021Date of Web Publication12-Apr-2021

Correspondence Address:
Dr. Nithya Jaideep Gogtay
Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Seth GS Medical College and KEM Hospital, Parel, Mumbai - 400 012, Maharashtra
India
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Source of Support: None, Conflict of Interest: None

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DOI: 10.4103/lungindia.lungindia_883_20

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   Abstract 


Remdesivir, a repurposed antiviral, was first accorded approval by the US Food Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of COVID-19 which necessitates hospitalization. However, the interim data of SOLIDARITY trial revealed no benefits with remdesivir for COVID-19 patients which led immediate debates in social media and the press about the utility of the drug. Both preclinical and clinical data demonstrated its efficacy in COVID-19. The recently concluded ACTT-1 trial showed its efficacy in reducing the duration of hospital stay which is of utmost importance for a country like India where reduction in bed occupancy can save lives of many and eases the financial burden of patient and government. Our benefit-risk analysis of ACTT-1 trial also favored the use of remdesivir over standard of care. The SOLIDARITY trial was fundamentally different from other clinical trials on remdesivir with respect to its design, adaptive nature, and selection of endpoints. Moreover, the success of antiviral therapy also depends on the timing of initiation and combination with other drugs. Hence we believe that drugs like Remdesivir are very important for countries like India where soft end points such as time to recovery and clinical improvement and early discharge become extremely significant during a pandemic.

Keywords: Antivirals, clinical data, endpoints, timing of therapy, trial design


How to cite this article:
Bose D, Gogtay NJ, Rajan SK. Placing the results of the SOLIDARITY trial with regards to remdesivir in perspective. Lung India 2021;38:382-6
   Evolution of the Use of Remdesivir Top

Injectable remdesivir, a repurposed antiviral, was first accorded approval by the US Food Drug Administration (FDA) on May 1, 2020, for emergency use to treat suspected or laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 in hospitalized adult and pediatric patients with severe disease.[1] In India, the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO) approved its use for the treatment of severe COVID-19 patients on 20th June , 2020.[2] CDSCO's approval was restricted to the hospitalized setting along with informed consent of the patient or his/her legally acceptable representative. The FDA on August 28, 2020, broadened the therapeutic applications of the drug to include hospitalized patients regardless of disease severity.[1]

On October 16, 2020, the Indian Council of Medical Research issued a press release stating that the interim analysis of SOLIDARITY trial revealed that no benefits were observed in Remdesivir treated COVID-19 patients (or any other drug tested in the study)-treated COVID-19 in any group (asymptomatic/mild/moderate/severe/critical) of patients.[3] This immediately led to debates in social media and the lay press about the utility of the drug. Exactly a week later, the US FDA approved Gilead's New Drug Application for the use of remdesivir in adults and pediatric patients for the treatment of COVID-19 which necessitates hospitalization.[1] This FDA approval changed the status of remdesivir from emergency use approval to full approval.[1] In contrast, the COVID-19 Subject Expert Committee of the CDCSCO did not grant full marketing authorization and opined to continue the restricted emergency use of remdesivir during its meeting on October 29, 2020.[4] Against this backdrop and the continuing debate on the utility of this drug in the ongoing pandemic, this paper attempts to place all clinical trial data of remdesivir in context so that clinicians can evaluate the totality of evidence with remdesivir and arrive at an informed decision regarding its utility.

   Preclinical Efficacy of Remdesivir Top

An early study showed the EC90 value of remdesivir against 2019-nCoV in Vero E6 cells to be 1.76 μM indicating that it would achieve the therapeutic concentration in nonhuman primate model. The same study also showed that remdesivir inhibited the viral infection effectively in human cell line which is sensitive to 2019-nCoV.[5]

   Human Trials with Remdesivir Top

The first human study was of its compassionate use in the United States where the 36/53 (68%) patients showed improvement in clinical status.[6] Subsequently, several multiple open-label and double-blind studies with both hard and soft endpoints have been published. The details of these studies are described in [Table 1].

Randomized control trials

A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter study on the use of remdesivir versus standard of care demonstrated that the use of remdesivir was not associated with a difference in time to clinical improvement. However, patients on the remdesivir arm had a numerically faster time to clinical improvement.[7] This trial was terminated early due to higher rate of treatment withdrawal due to adverse events in the remdesivir arm relative to the placebo group (18% vs. 5%).[7] Goldman et al. compared 5 days versus 10 days of remdesivir in patients with severe COVID-19 found that the time to recovery was 10 days in the 5-day group and 11 days in the 10-day group (adjusted odds ratio = 0.81 [0.64–1.04]).[8] Similarly, Spinner et al. conducted a randomized open-label trial on the effect of remdesivir versus standard care on clinical status at 11 days in patients with moderate COVID-19 and found that patients with moderate COVID-19 who were randomized to a 10-day course of remdesivir did not have a statistically significant difference in clinical status compared with standard care at 11 days after initiation of treatment. However, the patients randomized to a 5-day course of remdesivir had a statistically significant improvement in clinical status compared to standard care.[9] The recently concluded ACTT-1 trial was a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blinded trial with a primary endpoint of time to recovery of hospitalized COVID-19 patients. The median time to recovery from COVID-19 was 10 days for the Remdesivir group compared to 15 days for the placebo group (odds ratio = 1.5 [1.2–1.9]) Even the recovery rate was higher in the remdesivir arm compared to the standard-of-care group (rate ratio = 1.29 [1.12–1.49]). The rate serious adverse events were also lower with remdesivir as against the placebo (24.6% in the remdesivir group vs. 31.6% in the placebo group).[10]

Benefit-risk assessment of remdesivir from the ACTT-1 trial and the SOLIDARITY trial

The benefit-risk assessment of remdesivir in ACTT-1 trial favored the use of remdesivir since the number needed to treat (NNT) for benefit for recovery rate was 17 which indicates that 17 patients need to be treated with remdesivir rather than standard of care for one patient to recover from COVID-19, irrespective of the severity of disease. The NNT for harm for Grade 3 and 4 adverse event was 33 (a higher number) which indicates that when 33 patients are treated with remdesivir rather than placebo, one patient will experience a Grade 3 or Grade 4 adverse event.

The SOLIDARITY trial versus other trials on Remdesivir- Understanding study design and endpoints

In contrast to the ACTT trial, the SOLIDARITY trial did not find a statistically significant difference in mortality (a hard endpoint) between the remdesivir arm and the standard-of-care arm (10.8% in the remdesivir arm vs. 11.1% in the placebo arm). The latter had an open-label randomized design with an adaptive component in the treatment part (unpromising drugs could be dropped).[11]

Thus, in trials relative to SOLIDARITY, remdesivir demonstrated a shorter time to recovery and better odds of clinical improvement in moderate-to-severe group of patients. The primary endpoint of the SOLIDARITY study was inhospital mortality unlike the other trials where clinical improvement was the primary objective. The lack of improvement in hard endpoint like mortality does not take away from the beneficial effect of remdesivir seen on softer endpoints such as clinical improvement and time to recovery. Moreover, the SOLIDARITY trial underwent multiple iterations due to its adaptive nature. The SOLIDARITY trial was announced in March 18 where 500 centers across 30 countries participated.[11] This was one of the earlier studies which started with hydroxychloroquine as one arm with remdesivir being added much later in the trial putting the drug at a disadvantage with regard to power and the ability to find a difference in mortality.

Real-world evidence

A real-world study on remdesivir from India demonstrated that shorter symptom onset to remdesivir treatment (SORT) initiation was associated with significant benefit on all-cause mortality with significantly lower odds of death in patients with SORT interval ≤9 days (odds ratio = 0.44, 95% confidence interval, 0.25–0.76; P = 0.004). The study also demonstrated that the median length of hospital stay was 11 days (7–16 days) which is lesser compared to the ACTT-1 and Wang Y et al. study. The real world study from Bengaluru, India, demonstrated that the administration of SORT [interval ≤9 days] regimen led to median length of hospital stay for 6 days (4–9 days).[12] The observational studies from USA and India found that the remdesivir can be administered safely in COVID-19 patients with CrCl of <30 ml/min. [13,14] The study from India also highlighted that the patients who were on haemodialysis, tolerated the Remdesivir better, however, it is yet to be confirmed in larger studies.[14] Considering the higher incidence of acute kidney injury in hospitalized patients with SARS-CoV-2, these findings have significant impact on the treatment guideline of COVID-19 where few treatment options are available for this subset of patients.

   The Challenge of Using Antivirals: Getting the Timing Right Top

The use of appropriate antiviral therapy in COVID-19 patients is fraught with the challenge of getting the timing right for initiation of therapy. In other viral infections, early use of an effective antiviral drug (e.g., within 48 h of symptom onset with oseltamivir in patients with influenza) is associated with improved clinical outcomes. In the ACTT-1 clinical trial, the median number of days between the onset of symptoms and randomization to Remdesivir [or standard of care] was 9. The authors noted that the benefit of remdesivir was greater when initiated early.[10] The median time from symptom onset to treatment in the trial conducted by Spinner et al. was 8 days indicating that early administration of remdesivir is imperative to yield maximum benefit.[9],[15] A real-world study from India also observed that the shorter the time interval between the symptom onset and remdesivir initiation, the lesser the length of hospital stays and better mortality benefit.[12] A pharmacokinetic modeling study on COVID-19 patients found that the antivirals will reduce the viral load significantly if initiated before the onset of symptoms and are unlikely to impact the viral load after onset of symptoms.[16] The failure of oseltamivir in COVID-19 patients is a case in point. Chiba S et al. in their study initiated therapy with oseltamivir after the appearance of COVID-19 pneumonia and concluded that early administration of oseltamivir was critical for a favorable outcome in COVID-19 patients.[17]

   The Challenge of Using Only Monotherapy and the Need to Test Combinations Top

The other barrier in anti-viral usage is monotherapy rather than combination therapy as different antivirals act through different pathways. Hence, combining them together might lead to complete inhibition viral infection. There are several ongoing trials of remdesivir combination therapy two of which include – a multicentric, randomized, double-blind phase III trial (NCT04409262) on remdesivir and tocilizumab combination therapy against placebo in severe COVID-19 patient is underway with a primary objective of time from randomization to hospital discharge.[18] Another double-blind multicentric study (NCT04583956) of remdesivir + risankizumab combination therapy against remdesivir + placebo is ongoing with a primary objective of clinical efficacy in adults hospitalized with COVID-19 according to clinical status on an 8-point ordinal scale on day 8 in COVID-19 patients.[19] The recently published ACTT-2 trial has demonstrated the superiority of baricitinib and remdesivir combination therapy over remdesivir monotherapy among the patients who were on either high-flow oxygen or non-invasive ventilation. The time to recovery was 10 days in the combination group versus 18 days in the control group [RR -1.51 (95% CI, 1.10 – 2.08)] The odds of clinical improvement were also higher among these group of patients [OR – 2.2 (95% CI, 1.4 -3.6)]. However, the same clinical benefit was not reflected among the patients with supplemental oxygen therapy.[20]

   Our Perspective on the Use of Remdesivir Top

In resource-limited settings like India and other developing countries, there is immense pressure on health-care settings and particularly in the public sector in the face of a pandemic. In the absence of a truly virucidal drug, the focus of policy should be to reduce viral replication as soon as possible, help patients to recover soon, and thus reduce pressure on intensive care unit (ICU) and free up hospital beds for critically ill patients. The above are just some of the reasons why softer end points such as shorter time to recovery are extremely meaningful as these will reduce the bed occupancy as well as ICU occupancy. Both of this will ease the financial burden on the government and ensure bed availability for patients requiring hospitalization. Thus, the results of SOLIDARITY trial and the interpretation of “no benefit” should be viewed in context and should not be taken to assume lack of utility of Remdesivir. For a disease that is being treated with a repurposed drug, this would be foolhardy.

Anecdotally, health care professionals who have worked in the covid care facilities of Mumbai, have noted that early and judicious use of remdesivir has led to early discharge. This data however remains experiential and unpublished. Apart from this, side effects of remdesivir are largely mild and the requirement for non-invasive and invasive ventilation and duration of ICU stay much lower with its use. These metrices matter to India. This coupled with patients' satisfaction with remdesivir therapy [including HCWs themselves who received remdesivir] play a tremendous role in boosting HCW morale during COVID-19 management.

We strongly recommend a study for early use of remdesivir versus later use – something that could change the metric here. In addition, home use of the drug with trained nurses or family practitioners will save additional hospital beds, and we believe that the health economic impact of this approach in developing countries like India could be game changing.

We also believe the answer that we are seeking desperately about it impacting a hard endpoint like mortality will come only with the use of remdesivir in combination rather than as a single agent and timing its use appropriately.

Financial support and sponsorship

Nil.

Conflicts of interest

Both DB and NG did not have any conflict of interest but SKR is on the advisory board of Cipla Limited who are manufacturers of a generic version of Remdesivir in India.

 

   References Top
1.Available from: https://www.fda.gov/media/137564/download. [Last accessed on 2020 Nov 05].  Back to cited text no. 1
    2.Available from: https://www.cdsco.gov.in/opencms/opencms/system/modules/CDSCO.WEB/elements/download_file_division. [Last accessed on 2020 Nov 05].  Back to cited text no. 2
    3.Available from: https://www.icmr.gov.in/pdf/press_realease_files/ICMR_Press_Release_Solidarity_16102020_v1.pdf. [Last accessed on 2020 Nov 05].  Back to cited text no. 3
    4.Available from: https://www.cdsco.gov.in/opencms/opencms/system/modules/CDSCO.WEB/elements/common_download.jsp. [Last accessed on 2020 Nov 05].  Back to cited text no. 4
    5.Wang M, Cao R, Zhang L, Yang X, Liu J, Xu M, et al. Remdesivir and chloroquine effectively inhibit the recently emerged novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) in vitro. Cell Res 2020;30:269-71.  Back to cited text no. 5
    6.Grein J, Ohmagari N, Shin D, Diaz G, Asperges E, Castagna A, et al. Compassionate use of remdesivir for patients with severe Covid-19. N Engl J Med. 2020;382:2327-36.  Back to cited text no. 6
    7.Wang Y, Zhang D, Du G, Du R, Zhao J, Jin Y, et al. Remdesivir in adults with severe COVID-19: A randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre trial. Lancet 2020;395:1569-78.  Back to cited text no. 7
    8.Goldman JD, Lye DC, Hui DS, Marks KM, Bruno R, Montejano R, et al. Remdesivir for 5 or 10 days in patients with severe Covid-19. N Engl J Med 2020;383:1827-37.  Back to cited text no. 8
    9.Spinner CD, Gottlieb RL, Criner GJ, López JR, Cattelan AM, Viladomiu AS, et al. Effect of remdesivir vs standard care on clinical status at 11 days in patients with moderate COVID-19: A randomized clinical trial. JAMA 2020;324:1048-57.  Back to cited text no. 9
    10.Beigel JH, Tomashek KM, Dodd LE, Mehta AK, Zingman BS, Kalil AC, et al. Remdesivir for the treatment of Covid-19 final report. N Engl J Med 2020;383:1813-26.  Back to cited text no. 10
    11.Repurposed Antiviral Drugs for COVID-19 Interim WHO Solidarity Trial Results. Available from: https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.10.15.20209817v1.article-info. [Last accessed on 2020 Nov 05].  Back to cited text no. 11
    12.A Shorter Symptom-onset to Remdesivir Treatment (SORT) Interval is Associated with a Lower Mortality in Moderate-to-severe COVID-19: A Real-world Analysis. Available from: https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.11.05.20226373v1.full.pdf. [Last accessed on 2020 Nov 15].  Back to cited text no. 12
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    14.Sayali T, Chintan G, Tulsi M, Sreyashi B, Satarupa D, Nikhil S, et al. Safety of remdesivir in patients with acute kidney injury or CKD. Kidney Int Rep 2021;6:206-10.  Back to cited text no. 14
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    20.Kalil AC, Patterson TF, Mehta AK, Tomashek KM, Wolfe CR, Ghazaryan V, et al. Baricitinib plus Remdesivir for hospitalized adults with Covid-19. N Engl J Med 2021;384:795-807.  Back to cited text no. 20
    

 
 


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