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  5. Anticoagulation Before Hospitalization Is a Potential Protective Factor for COVID‐19: Insight From a French Multicenter Cohort Study

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Article
en
2021

Anticoagulation Before Hospitalization Is a Potential Protective Factor for COVID‐19: Insight From a French Multicenter Cohort Study

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en
2021
Vol 10 (8)
Vol. 10
DOI: 10.1161/jaha.120.018624

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David M. Smadja
David M. Smadja

Université René Descartes (Paris V)

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Richard Chocron
Richard Chocron
Vincent Galand
+67 more

Abstract

Background Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) is a respiratory disease associated with thrombotic outcomes with coagulation and endothelial disorders. Based on that, several anticoagulation guidelines have been proposed. We aimed to determine whether anticoagulation therapy modifies the risk of developing severe COVID‐19. Methods and Results Patients with COVID‐19 initially admitted in medical wards of 24 French hospitals were included prospectively from February 26 to April 20, 2020. We used a Poisson regression model, Cox proportional hazard model, and matched propensity score to assess the effect of anticoagulation on outcomes (intensive care unit admission or in‐hospital mortality). The study enrolled 2878 patients with COVID‐19, among whom 382 (13.2%) were treated with oral anticoagulation therapy before hospitalization. After adjustment, anticoagulation therapy before hospitalization was associated with a better prognosis with an adjusted hazard ratio of 0.70 (95% CI, 0.55–0.88). Analyses performed using propensity score matching confirmed that anticoagulation therapy before hospitalization was associated with a better prognosis, with an adjusted hazard ratio of 0.43 (95% CI, 0.29–0.63) for intensive care unit admission and adjusted hazard ratio of 0.76 (95% CI, 0.61–0.98) for composite criteria intensive care unit admission or death. In contrast, therapeutic or prophylactic low‐ or high‐dose anticoagulation started during hospitalization were not associated with any of the outcomes. Conclusions Anticoagulation therapy used before hospitalization in medical wards was associated with a better prognosis in contrast with anticoagulation initiated during hospitalization. Anticoagulation therapy introduced in early disease could better prevent COVID‐19–associated coagulopathy and endotheliopathy, and lead to a better prognosis.

How to cite this publication

Richard Chocron, Richard Chocron, Vincent Galand, Vincent Galand, Joffrey Cellier, Joffrey Cellier, Nicolas Gendron, Nicolas Gendron, Thibaut Pommier, Thibaut Pommier, Olivier Bory, Olivier Bory, Lina Khider, Lina Khider, Antonin Trimaille, Antonin Trimaille, Guillaume Goudot, Guillaume Goudot, Orianne Weizman, Orianne Weizman, Jean Marc Alsac, Jean Marc Alsac, Laura Geneste, Laura Geneste, Armand Schmeltz, Armand Schmeltz, Vassili Panagides, Vassili Panagides, Aurélien Philippe, Aurélien Philippe, Wassima Marsou, Wassima Marsou, Iannis Ben Abdallah, Iannis Ben Abdallah, Antoine Deney, Antoine Deney, Salma El Batti, Salma El Batti, Sabir Attou, Sabir Attou, Philippe Juvin, Philippe Juvin, Thomas Delmotte, Thomas Delmotte, Emmanuel Messas, Emmanuel Messas, Théo Pezel, Théo Pezel, Benjamin Planquette, Benjamin Planquette, Baptiste Duceau, Baptiste Duceau, Pascale Gaussem, Pascale Gaussem, Willy Sutter, Willy Sutter, Olivier Sanchez, Olivier Sanchez, Victor Waldman, Victor Waldman, Jean‐Luc Diehl, Jean‐Luc Diehl, Tristan Mirault, Tristan Mirault, Guillaume Bonnet, Guillaume Bonnet, Ariel Cohen, Ariel Cohen, David M. Smadja, David M. Smadja (2021). Anticoagulation Before Hospitalization Is a Potential Protective Factor for COVID‐19: Insight From a French Multicenter Cohort Study. , 10(8), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/jaha.120.018624.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2021

Authors

70

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1161/jaha.120.018624

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