Interventions for palliative symptom control in COVID-19 patients

No SJR dataAug 23, 2021The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Treatments to relieve symptoms in patients with COVID-19 receiving palliative care

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Abstract

Four uncontrolled studies evaluated pharmacological interventions for palliative symptom control in COVID-19 patients, involving between 61 and 2105 participants.

  • Pharmacological interventions included opioids, neuroleptics, anticholinergics, and benzodiazepines to address symptoms like breathlessness, delirium, and anxiety.
  • All studies reported that a majority of interventions were rated as completely or partially effective for symptom relief by outcome assessors.
  • The certainty of evidence for the primary outcome of symptom relief was rated as very low due to high risk of bias and confounding factors.
  • No studies provided data on the safety of pharmacological interventions or explored non-pharmacological interventions for symptom control.
  • The lack of robust evidence suggests that conclusions regarding the effectiveness and safety of these interventions in COVID-19 patients cannot be made.

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