key: cord-0693762-sr2zbfnc authors: Macaluso, Fabio Salvatore; Orlando, Ambrogio title: COVID-19 IN PATIENTS WITH INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF CLINICAL DATA date: 2020-09-06 journal: Dig Liver Dis DOI: 10.1016/j.dld.2020.09.002 sha: f6ae3e5dde14609bd31e6044688e401c7be3aa2b doc_id: 693762 cord_uid: sr2zbfnc BACKGROUND: Great efforts by the scientific community are rapidly expanding the evidence on the clinical interplay between Covid-19 and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). AIMS: We performed a systematic review of the literature on published Covid-19 cases occurring in patients with IBD. METHODS: PubMed Central/Medline and Embase were systemically searched for records up to May 31, 2020. RESULTS: 13 cohort studies and 5 single case reports were included in the qualitative synthesis. A cumulative number of approximately 800 patients with IBD and Covid-19 were identified. The case fatality rate ranged from 0% to 20.0%. Overall, immunomodulators and biologics were not associated with higher risk of Covid-19 or with negative outcomes, while the the use of systemic corticosteroids was related to worse prognosis in some studies. CONCLUSIONS: This systematic review highlighted two main points that may help clinicians dealing with IBD in reassuring their patients: (1) patients with IBD do not seem to be at higher risk of being infected by SARS-COV-2 than the general population; (2) in case of Covid-19, treatment with immunomodulators or biologics is not associated with worse prognosis, while systemic steroids are suspected to be potentially detrimental, even if more data are needed to confirm this point. At the end of 2019, China reported several cases of severe pneumonia of unknown cause that would subsequently be identified as attributable to the novel Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome-coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) [1] . Such disease was later called coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) [2] . Considering the global transmission of Covid-19, the disease has been defined as a pandemic by the World Health Organization on March 11, 2020 [3] . As of May 31, 2020, there had been 5,934,936 confirmed cases of Covid-19 globally with 367,166 deaths [4] . At the time of manuscript drafting, USA and Brazil are experiencing the most worrisome consequences of the pandemic, with a rapid growth of cases, deaths and burden for the health systems. As one might expect, such a large-scale event can only generate a huge impact at every level. In the healthcare setting, the possible impact of Covid-19 in patients with chronic diseases -including inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)should be considered. Indeed, both patients and physicians are currently focused on two main issues. First, are patients with IBD at increased risk for Covid-19? Second, could the immunomodulators or biologics used for treatment of IBD increase the risk of developing severe forms of Covid-19? Actually, the interplay between Covid-19 and IBD is currently poorly known, given the short time from the viral disease outbreak. Anyway, great efforts by the scientific community are rapidly expanding the evidence on this topic. In an attempt to provide the current evidence on the clinical interplay between Covid-19 and IBDeven in this rapidly evolving current scenario, where novel data emerge every daywe performed a systematic review of the literature on Covid-19 cases occurring in patients with IBD. Current evidence was resumed in order to support gastroenterologists dealing with IBD in this times dominated by Covid-19 pandemic. The Meta-analysis Of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (MOOSE) statements were followed [5] . Primary sources of the reviewed studies, including English sources only, were PubMed Central/Medline and Embase, which were searched systemically for records published up to May 31, 2020. Searches included combinations of the following medical subject headings (MeSH): -Covid-19‖, -Covid19‖, -Pandemic‖, -Sars-Cov-2‖, with one or more of the following: -inflammatory bowel disease‖, -Crohn's disease‖, -Crohn disease‖, -Crohn‖, -Ulcerative colitis‖. The terms were combined using the set operator AND. Database searches were supplemented with literature searches of reference lists from potentially eligible articles by both reviewers to find additional studies. Papers selected for the analysis included retrospective or prospective studies reporting clinical data on patients with IBD and infection with Sars-Cov-2. There were no restrictions in the number of patients described by each study, so that also case reports were included. Studies reported solely as abstracts and narrative reviews were not included in the qualitative synthesis. Among the 87 records that were identified through electronic search after duplicates removal, both reviewers independently evaluated the titles and abstracts, removed 68 studies that did not meet the inclusion criteria, and selected 19 potentially relevant reports that were identified and retrieved for detailed evaluation. Among these, 18 papers [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] [19] [20] [21] [22] [23] were included in the qualitative synthesis ( Figure 1 ). For each study, the reviewers independently extracted the data of interest, and entered them into a structured database using a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. In particular, the data of interest included the name of the first author, the country where the study was conducted, the period of observation/reporting, the number of IBD patients who developed Covid-19, the number of IBD patients with Covid-19 older than 60 years, the case fatality rate, and the modality of diagnosis or exclusion of Covid-19. Furthermore, data on association between IBD treatments and severity of Covid-19 were also collected. Discrepancies among reviewers about qualitative and quantitative data collection were infrequent (overall interobserver variation < 10%), and were resolved through discussion until consensus was reached. . Among the 18 studies included in the qualitative synthesis, 13 were cohort studies, and 5 were single case reports. The main characteristics and finding of the 13 cohort studies are shown in table 1. Notably, 2 of them came from China, 2 from Italy, 1 from Italy and France, 2 from Spain, 4 from the U.S.A., and 2 collected data from all parts of the world (one paediatric setting, the other one covered both paediatric and adult patients). A cumulative number of approximately 800 patients with IBD and Covid-19 were identified. A precise number cannot be provided, as a certain degree of overlap of patients between the different reports and databases may be hypothesized. The case fatality rate ranged from 0% to 20.0%. Table 2 reports data on comparisons of case fatality rate of Covid-19 between patients with IBD and the general population (4 studies). Coherently with the initial diffusion of Sars-Cov-2, the first reports about Covid-19 in patients with IBD came from China. The IBD Elite Union, which incorporates the seven largest IBD centers in China with more than 20,000 IBD patients, reported no cases of Covid-19 dating March 8, 2020 [6] . Similar data were also obtained from Wuhan, the first zone of outbreak of the pandemic [7] . Three hundred and eighteen patients with IBD were registered in a prospective database at the Regional Medical IBD Center of China, Renmin Hospital of Wuhan University, between January 1, 2000, and December 8, 2019. Between December 8, 2019, and March 30, 2020, these patients were followed-up with intensive alerts, recommendations, and information messages provided with e-mails or phone calls, in order to improve prevention strategies against infection from Sars-CoV-2 and receive promptly diagnosis of Covid-19. As of March 30, none of these patients with IBD had confirmed or suspected Covid-19. The disease was also excluded in 29 patients by chest CT scans and virological testing. Among the European countries, Italyand especially the Northern Italy -was firstly assailed by the pandemic. Nonetheless, the first data on Covid-19 in IBD patients were quite reassuring. Norsa and colleagues reported no case of Covid-19 among their IBD cohort, which included 522 patients from the province of Bergamoone of the area with the highest rate of Sars-CoV-2 infection in Lombardy [8] . Notably, applying a mathematical model, authors speculated that approximately 4% of the total population of the province should have been infected with Sars-CoV-2, so that 21 cases should be expected in their IBD cohort. However, case identification was not performed in all patients, as only those with severe symptoms and/or with established contact with infected patients received a nasopharyngeal swab at the times of the peak of the pandemic, leaving the asymptomatic subjects out of the count and, as a consequence, asymptomatic or mild cases could have been undiagnosed. Another study performed in a combined cohort of approximately 6,000 IBD patients from France (Nancy University Hospital) and Italy (Humanitas, Milan)both regions with high incidence of Covid-19 -reported only 15 cases of Covid-19, accounting for a cumulative incidence of 0.0025%, with no deaths despite all but one patients were treated with biological and/or immunosuppressive therapy [9] . Other relevant findings were obtained by a recent, prospective, observational cohort study initiated and supported by the Italian Group for the Study of Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IG-IBD) [10] . All centres affiliated with IG-IBD were invited to participate in the study with an open call for participation. Between 11 and 29 March 2020, 79 patients with IBD and Covid-19 were identified. Thirty-six patients had Covid-19-related pneumonia (46%), 22 (28%) were hospitalised, and 6 (8%) died. Interestingly, while active IBD, older age and presence of comorbidities were found to be associated with a higher risk of Covid-19 pneumonia and death, therapy with biologics and immunosuppressants did not associate with worse outcomes, even if a trend towards aworse prognosis was reported for corticosteroids use. Another European country which was gravely hit by the pandemic was Spain. In this regard, the first dataspecifically from the Basque Countrywere provided by Rodríguez-Lago and colleagues [11] . From February 27, 2020 to April 8, 2020, 40 patients with IBD and a positive test for SARS-CoV-2 from 5 Basque sites were reported. Notably, 28% and 18% of cases were under immunomodulators or biological therapy, respectively, none of these patients was admitted to intensive care unit, and only 2 died (an 86-year-old male and a 77-year-old male). Another study from the Hospital Clinico San Carlos of Madrid reported -through April 8, 2020 -12 patients with Covid-19 out of 1,918 IBD patients [12] . Interestingly, 7 patients (58%) were on treatment with immunomodulators and/or biologics, and 2 patients died. The authors calculated that the cumulative incidence of Covid-19 was 6.1 per 1000 IBD patients, and that IBD patients had a lower adjusted incidence ratio of Covid-19 (OR 0.74) with similar associated mortality ratio compared with the general population in Madrid. The first U.S. study that evaluated the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 infection in IBD patients was performed in a Northern Carolina Cohort [13] . From March 4, 2020 to April 14, 2020, 14,235 individuals were tested for SARS-CoV-2 with 8.2% testing positive. Among the tested patients, the prevalence of IBD was 1.2% (168/14,235), and among these 168 IBD patients, the prevalence of COVID-19 was 3.0% (5/168). Interestingly, only age > 66 years was independently associated with increased risk of COVID-19 at multivariate logistic regression analysis. Four out of these 5 patients had a mild course, whereas one patient developed pneumonia and died. Another retrospective review conducted in New York between March 4, 2020 and April 9, 2020 recorded 17 patients with IBD out of 1,059 total patients infected with Sars-CoV-2 [14] . A more recent study by Lukin and colleagues used the same source cohort of all Covid-19-positive patients at two New York hospitals of the previous study [15] . Eighty Covid-19 patients with IBD were matched for decade of age and gender in a 1:2 ratio to 160 Covid-19 patients without IBD. Interestingly, the use of anti-TNFs was not an independent risk factor for more severe Covid-19, as well as the use of other biologics did not seem to be related to worse outcomes. Finally, 5 case reports of patients with IBD and Covid-19 were published. Rosen and colleagues described a patient with acute severe ulcerative colitis during her first trimester of pregnancy who also had diagnosis of Covid-19 [19] . She was treated with cyclosporine and steroids for ulcerative colitis, and azithromycin and hydroxychloroquine for Covid-19. Unfortunately, the patient experienced a spontaneous abortion. Mazza S et al, described a case of Covid-19 pneumonia occurring in an 80-year-old female with acute severe ulcerative colitis [20] ; the patient died despite treatment with systemic steroids plus non-invasive ventilation, and a combination of lopinavir/ritonavir and hydroxychloroquine. Another case report from Italy described a 30-year old male with Crohn's disease and Covid-19, whose pulmonary disease recovered quickly despite the patient was under treatment with adalimumab [21] . Another paper described a man in his late 60s embarked on the Diamond Princess cruise ship who had been treated with infliximab and azathioprine for ulcerative colitis [22] . He was administered his last infusion of infliximab 4 days before boarding. On the cruise ship, he developed Covid-19, but after hospitalization no findings of pneumonia were observed by chest CT scanning, and his symptoms resolved within a few days without treatment. Another favorable course of Covid-19, with no need for hospitalization, was reported in a 33-year old woman with a 13-year history of ulcerative colitis on tofacitinib when infected with SARS-CoV-2 [23] . This systematic review aimed at summarizing the current evidence on the prevalence and impact of Covid-19the global health crisis of our time -in patients with IBD. Even if the evidence on this topic is rapidly evolving, and despite the limitation related to the eligibility to English-only studies, we believe that this cumulative analysis of clinical data was able to give relevant indications to clinicians dealing with IBD. Regarding the possibility that patients with IBD may have an increased risk for Covid-19, we know that SARS-CoV-2 is detectable in stools [24] , but there is no evidence that the content of ACE2 (i.e. the viral receptor) in the ileum and colon -that is increased [27] . Translating these concepts of basic science into clinical data, our review identified a cumulative number of approximately 800 patients with IBD and Covid-19. A precise number cannot be provided, as overlap of patients between the different studies or databases may be hypothesized. Anyway, this number is relatively small even taking into account an unavoidable certain degree of under-reporting. For example, considering the very high prevalence of SARS-COV-2 infection in Italy and USA, we would expect higher prevalence or incidence than those reported by several studies. Overall, these findings confirm that patients with IBD are not at higher risk of being infected by SARS-COV-2 than the general population. The second hot question regards the theoretical risk of developing severe forms of Covid-19 in patients with IBD on immunomodulators or biologics. Indeed, several drugs used for the treatment of IBD can promote the occurrence of infections due to the interference of these compounds on the mechanisms of signaling of the immune system [28] . Data arising from our review are reassuring. Overall, the case-fatality rate among the studies was not higher than that reported in the general population. Furthermore, the negative outcomes were associated to older age, presence of comorbidities, and male sexall risk factors which had already been found in the general population [29] but not with immunosuppressants or biologics. Of note, the overall effect estimate of anti-TNFs in the SECURE-IBD was 0.9 (even if not significant): this finding may suggest that patients with IBD on immunomodulatory treatmentsparticularly those who directly interfere with cytokines action and production -may be even protected against the severe forms of Covid-19 [30] , as they could interfere with key points of the -cytokine storm‖ syndrome, the pathophysiological mechanism driving the severe forms of Covid-19 [31] . Obviously, these latter considerations need confirmation in large-scale clinical studies. Conversely, an association with worse outcomes was found for the use of systemic steroids, which was associated with negative outcomes in the SECURE-IBD, in the study by Lukin and colleagues, and in the IG-IBD study (even if only with a trend towards statistical significance). However, it should be noted that the effects of continuing systemic steroids or stopping them after Covid-19 diagnosis in IBD patients are still unknown, so more data are needed to clarify this issue. Similarly, the association between worse outcomes and use of 5-ASA/sulfasalazine highlighted by SECURE-IBD is currently unclear and deserves further confirmation. In conclusion, this systematic review highlighted two main points that may help clinicians dealing with IBD in reassuring their patients: (1) patients with IBD do not seem to be at higher risk of being infected by SARS-COV-2 than the general population; (2) A novel coronavirus from patients with pneumonia in China Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Symptoms of coronavirus disease 2019 Rolling updates on coronavirus disease (COVID-19) World Health Organization for the Meta-analysis Of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (MOOSE) Group. Meta-analysis of Observational Studies in Epidemiology. 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