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Articles tagged with "coronavirus"

Doctors Detail Kawasaki-Like Disease in Adult COVID-19 Patients

Carolyn Crist  |  July 17, 2020

(Reuters Health)—During the COVID-19 pandemic, an inflammatory condition similar to Kawasaki disease has been reported in children and adolescents, and now two groups of New York doctors each describe a case, one in a 36-year-old woman and one in a 45-year-old man.1 “We’re still learning how COVID-19 is affecting children and adults. The better we…

Telemedicine & Fellowship Education After COVID-19: Q&A with Kanika Monga, MD

Susan Bernstein  |  July 14, 2020

The COVID-19 pandemic is reshaping clinical rheumatology and the fellowship experience. Rheumatology education should include how to triage patients for remote visits, says second-year fellow Kanika Monga, MD…

Tocilizumab Fails to Help COVID-19 Patients in Italian Study

Emilio Parodi & Carl O'Donnell  |  June 23, 2020

(Reuters)—Roche’s rheumatoid arthritis drug Actemra (tocilizumab) failed to help patients with early-stage COVID-19 pneumonia in an Italian study, the latest instance in which an anti-inflammatory drug has fallen through in a coronavirus trial. Despite the setback, the Swiss drugmaker said that it is pressing ahead with testing tocilizumab in another trial against COVID-19, the disease…

Respiratory Failure More Common in COVID-19 Patients with Rheumatic Disease

Marilynn Larkin  |  June 23, 2020

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—COVID-19-infected patients with rheumatic disease were more likely to experience respiratory failure than those without rheumatic disease, according to a retrospective study in China. “Immune dysregulation underlying rheumatic diseases may affect the disease manifestation of COVID-19,” Dr. Jixin Zhong of Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, tells Reuters Health by email….

Some Rheumatic Diseases Tied to Higher Risk of Severe COVID-19

Megan Brooks  |  June 23, 2020

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Patients with some inflammatory rheumatic conditions are at higher risk for hospital-diagnosed COVID-19 infection compared with the general population, but it depends on the condition and therapy used to treat it, according to a study from Spain. It’s now clear that older patients and those with some common diseases are at increased…

EULAR & ACR COVID-19 Recommendations: How to Manage Patients During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Thomas R. Collins  |  June 23, 2020

ACR & EULAR recommendations for the treatment of patients with rheumatic illness during the COVID-19 pandemic are explored…

Influential Lancet Article on HCQ Retracted

Michael Erman  |  June 5, 2020

NEW YORK, June 4 (Reuters)—Three of the authors of an influential article that found hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) increased the risk of death in COVID-19 patients retracted the study, citing concerns about the quality of the data behind it. The anti-malarial drug has been controversial in part due to support from U.S. President Donald Trump, as well…

WHO Expects HCQ Safety Findings by Mid-June

Reuters Staff  |  May 28, 2020

ZURICH (Reuters)—The World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday promised a swift review of data on hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), probably by mid-June, after safety concerns prompted the group to suspend the malaria drug’s use in a trial on COVID-19 patients. U.S. President Donald Trump and others have pushed HCQ as a possible coronavirus treatment, but the WHO…

Hydroxychloroquine Tied to Increased Risk of Death in COVID-19 Patients

Reuters Staff  |  May 26, 2020

(Reuters)—Malaria drug hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), which U.S. President Donald Trump says he has been taking, is tied to increased risk of death in COVID-19 patients, according to a study published in The Lancet.1 The registry analysis, which included data from 671 hospitals in six continents and over 96,000 patients hospitalized with COVID-19, showed that people treated…

U.K. Healthcare Workers Begin COVID-19 HCQ Trial

Kylie MacLellan  |  May 26, 2020

LONDON (Reuters)—On May 21, British healthcare workers began taking part in a University of Oxford-led international trial of two anti-malarial drugs to see if they can prevent COVID-19, including one U.S. President Donald Trump says he has been taking. The COPCOV study will involve more than 40,000 frontline healthcare workers from Europe, Africa, Asia and…

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