The Latest in Critical Care, 2/26/24 (Issue #31)
Tenecteplase for stroke after 4.5 hours; Lumbar drains after SAH; Covid update; Patient complexity going up
Tenecteplase for acute ischemic stroke presenting after 4.5 hours (TIMELESS trial)
Tenecteplase (TNKase or TNK) is genetically modified alteplase (tPA). Because it can be infused more rapidly than alteplase, TNK is gaining prominence as thrombolytic treatment for acute ischemic stroke, in patients presenting within 4.5 hours of their last time known to be well.
Lumbar drains after coiling for subarachnoid hemorrhage (EARLYDRAIN trial)
In people with nontraumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage, despite coiling or clipping of the culprit aneurysm and prophylactic nimodipine, ischemic vasospasm and secondary brain injury frequently develop. As a result, most people who experience subarachnoid hemorrhage due to aneurysm die or are severely disabled. (Historically, almost 40% of those with aneurysmal SAH died within 30 days. With systematic improvements in interventions, ICU management and transport to expert centers, case-fatality rates and disability in SAH have been steadily
Covid Update: Two new drugs for mild-moderate symptoms; Fluvoxamine RCT; Covid โbrain fogโ
Paxlovid improves outcomes for the elderly and other people at high risk for severe Covid, but the best available data suggest it doesnโt meaningfully help healthier, younger people. Two new drugs do appear to reduce mild-moderate Covid symptoms, but wonโt be available in the U.S. anytime soon.
Simnotrelvir, a new compound, was tested against placebo in a phase 2โ3 randomized trial among 1,208 patients with mild to moderate Covid-19 in China. Patients receiving simnotrelvir got better faster (by about a day and a half), had greater declines in viral load (and presumably less shedding, although transmissibility was not tested). There were no serious adverse events; 4% experienced hypertriglyceridemia, and 2% experienced neutropenia. The drug is available in China, but there is no known pending FDA application.
Another new compound called ensitrelvir, marketed as Xocova under an emergency use authorization in Japan, reduces symptoms by about one day, and appeared to improve smell and taste more quickly than placebo, along with reducing viral positivity. Phase 3 trials are still ongoing.
Will there even be a market for these new drugs in the United States, where most people at lower risk for severe Covid now forgo yearly vaccination or testing during illness, and where the CDC has decided to meet Americans where they are by curtailing recommended isolation to (in essence) โuntil you start to feel a little betterโ?
In other Covid news:
Fluvoxamine 100 mg bid, after showing promise in an improvised randomized trial in the late Delta era, was not shown to speed recovery from mild-to-moderate Omicron-era Covid, among 1,175 people in a randomized trial published in JAMA.ย
Persistent symptoms of Covid affect an estimated 65 million people worldwide, but so-called โlong Covidโ has proven to be very difficult to define or study productively. A new Danish study helps place the concept of post-Covid โbrain fogโ in context with sequelae from other illnesses. Patients (n=120) who experienced severe Covid-19 in 2020 and 2021 (Delta era) were prospectively followed post-discharge and compared with 125 controls who had been hospitalized for myocardial infarctions or pneumonia, and 100 non-hospitalized healthy controls. When compared to healthy controls, people who had recovered from severe Covid had lower scores on cognitive testing and other psychiatric and neurologic tests. However, the decreases in cognitive scores after severe Covid were similar to declines seen in patients after hospitalization for myocardial infarction or pneumonia. Read in JAMA Network Open
It's not just you - patients are getting more complex
If it feels like more work to take care of the same number of patients these days, thatโs only because it is. Patients have become more complex with a larger burden of chronic disease over the last 15 years, according to a new study in JAMA Internal Medicine.