WHO updates clinical care guidance with corticosteroid recommendations

Sept. 3, 2020

The World Health Organization (WHO) published guidance for clinicians and healthcare decision makers on the use of corticosteroids in patients with COVID-19, on Sep. 2, 2020. 

The Who recommends systemic corticosteroids for the treatment of patients with severe and critical COVID-19. However, the WHO suggests against use of corticosteroids in the treatment of patients with non-severe COVID-19 as the treatment brought no benefits and could even prove harmful. Treatment should be under supervision of a clinician. 

Corticosteroids are listed in the WHO model list of essential medicines, readily available globally at a low cost.  WHO encourages countries to maintain sufficient stocks of corticosteroids to treat COVID-19 and the other disease for which they are effective, while not maintaining excessive stocks, which could deny other countries access. 

This guidance was developed in collaboration with the non-profit Magic Evidence Ecosystem Foundation (MAGIC), which provided methodologic support to develop and disseminate living guidance for COVID-19 drug treatments. 

Work on this guidance began on June 22, when the RECOVERY trial published a preliminary report on the impact of corticosteroids. To supplement the results, the WHO partnered with investigators of seven trials on corticosteroids to conduct a meta-analysis of these trials, in order to rapidly provide additional evidence to build on RECOVERY data and inform guidance development. 

This guidance was informed by combining data from eight randomized trials of systemic corticosteroids for COVID-19. 

WHO has the update

More COVID-19 coverage HERE.