Paxlovid Associated with Decreased Hospitalization Rate Among Adults with COVID-19 — United States, April–September 2022

On November 22, 2022, this report was posted online as an MMWR Early Release.

Melisa M. Shah, MD1; Brendan Joyce2; Ian D. Plumb, MBBS1; Sam Sahakian, MS2; Leora R. Feldstein, PhD1; Eric Barkley2; Mason Paccione, MSP2; Joseph Deckert, PhD2; Danessa Sandmann, MPH2; Jacqueline L. Gerhart, MD2*; Melissa Briggs Hagen, MD1* (View author affiliations)

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Summary

What is already known about this topic?

Nirmatrelvir-ritonavir (Paxlovid) is an outpatient antiviral medication recommended for adults with mild-to-moderate COVID-19 who have elevated risk of severe illness.

What is added by this report?

Among U.S. adults diagnosed with COVID-19, including those with previous infection or vaccination, persons who were prescribed Paxlovid within 5 days of diagnosis had a 51% lower hospitalization rate within 30 days after diagnosis than those who were not prescribed Paxlovid.

What are the implications for public health practice?

Paxlovid should be offered to eligible adults irrespective of vaccination status, especially in groups with the highest risk for severe COVID-19 outcomes, such as older adults and those with multiple underlying health conditions.

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Nirmatrelvir-ritonavir (Paxlovid), an oral antiviral treatment, is authorized for adults with mild-to-moderate COVID-19 who are at increased risk for progression to severe illness. However, real-world evidence on the benefit of Paxlovid, according to vaccination status, age group, and underlying health conditions, is limited. To examine the benefit of Paxlovid in adults aged ≥18 years in the United States, a large electronic health record (EHR) data set (Cosmos) was analyzed to assess the association between receiving a prescription for Paxlovid and hospitalization with a COVID-19 diagnosis in the ensuing 30 days. A Cox proportional hazards model was used to estimate this association, adjusted for demographic characteristics, geographic location, vaccination, previous infection, and number of underlying health conditions. Among 699,848 adults aged ≥18 years eligible for Paxlovid during April–August 2022, 28.4% received a Paxlovid prescription within 5 days of COVID-19 diagnosis. Being prescribed Paxlovid was associated with a lower hospitalization rate among the overall study population (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] = 0.49), among those who had received ≥3 mRNA COVID-19 vaccines (aHR = 0.50), and across age groups (18–49 years: aHR = 0.59; 50–64 years: aHR = 0.40; and ≥65 years: aHR = 0.53). Paxlovid should be prescribed to eligible adults to reduce the risk of COVID-19–associated hospitalization.

Paxlovid is an oral antiviral medication that received Emergency Use Authorization by the Food and Drug Administration on December 22, 2021 (1), for use in patients with mild-to-moderate COVID-19 at high risk for progression to severe illness. Eligibility for Paxlovid includes 1) receipt of a positive SARS-CoV-2 test result (including home antigen test), 2) symptoms consistent with mild-to-moderate COVID-19, 3) symptom onset within the past 5 days, 4) age ≥18 years (or age ≥12 years and weight ≥40 kg), 5) one or more risk factors for progression to severe COVID-19, 6) no known or suspected severe renal or hepatic impairment, 7) no history of clinically significant reactions (e.g., toxic epidermal necrolysis or Stevens-Johnson syndrome) to the active ingredients (nirmatrelvir or ritonavir) or other components of the product, and 8) no contraindicated medications.§

A retrospective analysis was performed on patient records included in Cosmos, a data set that includes EHR information from >160 million persons in U.S. health systems covered by Epic, a health care software company (https://cosmos.epic.com). Inclusion criteria comprised 1) diagnosis of COVID-19 or a positive SARS-CoV-2 test result during April 1–August 31, 2022; 2) an outpatient encounter (telemedicine, in-person, urgent care, emergency department, or other)** associated with the COVID-19 diagnosis; 3) at least one previous face-to-face encounter in Cosmos during the 3 years preceding the COVID-19 diagnosis††; 4) age ≥50 years, or ≥18 years with a documented underlying health condition based on International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) codes or medical record fields§§; 5) not known to be pregnant; and 6) not known to have pharmacologic or medical contraindications to Paxlovid use.¶¶ For patients with multiple SARS-CoV-2 infections during the study period, only data from the first infection were used in the analysis; date of diagnosis (earliest COVID-19 diagnosis code or positive SARS-CoV-2 test result) was used as a proxy for symptom onset, and Paxlovid receipt was defined as receiving a prescription for Paxlovid during the 5 days after COVID-19 diagnosis.*** The primary outcome was overnight COVID-19 hospitalization during the 30 days after the date of diagnosis; secondary outcomes were all-cause hospitalization and acute respiratory illness (ARI)–associated hospitalization.†††

Association between Paxlovid receipt and subsequent hospitalization was assessed using a Cox proportional hazards model, including age group, sex, race and ethnicity, social vulnerability index,§§§ number of underlying health conditions, U.S. Census Bureau region of residence, previous COVID-19 infection, and COVID-19 vaccination status.¶¶¶ In-hospital COVID-19 mortality during an admission commencing during the 30-day follow-up period was described but not used as an analytic outcome because of concern about underascertainment. Persons receiving Paxlovid contributed unexposed time until the prescription date and exposed time after the prescription date; those not receiving Paxlovid contributed unexposed time. Follow-up time ended when a hospitalization occurred or at 30 days after diagnosis, whichever came first. To assess possible bias related to symptom severity at diagnosis, primary analyses were repeated either excluding telemedicine visits, or excluding patients hospitalized during the 2 days after diagnosis. This activity was reviewed by CDC and was conducted consistent with applicable federal law and CDC policy.****

Among 1,713,120 persons aged ≥18 years with a COVID-19 diagnosis during April 1–August 31, 2022, 699,848 (40.9%) met the inclusion criteria, including 198,927 who received Paxlovid within 5 days after diagnosis and 500,921 who did not (Figure). Among all persons with COVID-19 who were eligible for Paxlovid, 15.0% had documentation of previous infection and 68.8% were confirmed to have received ≥2 COVID-19 mRNA vaccine doses. Overall, 28.4% of eligible persons received Paxlovid. Paxlovid recipients were more likely to have a telehealth encounter (49.1%) than nonrecipients (18.4%, standardized mean difference = 0.69). Prevalences of underlying health conditions were similar among Paxlovid recipients and nonrecipients (Table 1), and 92.4% had at least one underlying condition. Persons who were immunocompromised†††† accounted for 9.4% (64,911) of the study population, 30.2% of whom received Paxlovid. During the 30 days after a COVID-19 diagnosis, 5,229 (0.75%) persons were hospitalized; 3,311 (63.3%) of these hospitalizations occurred among persons aged ≥65 years. Among the 198,927 Paxlovid recipients, 930 (0.47%) were hospitalized,§§§§ compared with 4,299 (0.86%) of nonrecipients. Among the 5,229 persons with a COVID-19 hospitalization, 930 (17.8%) received Paxlovid during the 5 days after diagnosis. Overall, 211 deaths were reported during a COVID-19 hospitalization. Among those who received Paxlovid, 0.01% (29 of 198,927) died compared with 0.04% (182 of 500,921) of persons who did not receive Paxlovid.

Paxlovid receipt was associated with protection against hospitalization overall (aHR = 0.49, 95% CI = 0.46–0.53) (Table 2), including among persons who had received ≥3 mRNA vaccine doses (0.50, 95% CI = 0.45–0.55) and 2 previous mRNA vaccine doses (0.50, 95% CI = 0.42–0.58). Paxlovid receipt was associated with lower hospitalization rates among persons aged 18–49 years (aHR = 0.59, 95% CI = 0.48–0.71), 50–64 years (0.40, 95% CI = 0.34–0.48), and ≥65 years (0.53, 95% CI = 0.48–0.58). Among persons aged 18–49 years, Paxlovid receipt was associated with lower hospitalization rates among persons who had received ≥3 mRNA vaccine doses (aHR = 0.75, 95% CI = 0.53–1.06) and those with only one underlying health condition (aHR = 0.91, 95% CI = 0.58–1.44), but these estimates did not reach statistical significance. Estimated protection by Paxlovid was similar by month of diagnosis. Findings from sensitivity analyses, excluding telemedicine encounters and patients hospitalized during the first 2 days after diagnosis, also indicated significant reduction in hospitalization among Paxlovid recipients.¶¶¶¶ In the analysis of secondary outcomes, among the overall study population, Paxlovid receipt was associated with a lower rate of all-cause hospitalization (aHR = 0.45, 95% CI = 0.43–0.48) and ARI-associated hospitalization (aHR = 0.48, 95% CI = 0.45–0.51).

Discussion

In a sample of U.S. COVID-19 patients, many of whom had previous SARS-CoV-2 infection or were vaccinated against COVID-19, the overall COVID-19 hospitalization rate was 51% lower among those who had received a prescription for Paxlovid for presumed mild-to-moderate COVID-19, compared with those who did not. Similar benefit was seen among persons who had received ≥2 COVID-19 mRNA vaccine doses. The initial randomized clinical trial of Paxlovid, which showed an 89% reduction in severe COVID-19 outcomes, was conducted in unvaccinated persons with no previous infection during the period preceding Omicron variant predominance (2). This real-word analysis demonstrated that being prescribed Paxlovid is associated with a substantially reduced hospitalization risk among persons with previous immunity from infection or vaccination in the setting of the current circulating Omicron subvariants. These findings parallel those of other studies indicating added protection from Paxlovid even among persons with previous infection or vaccination (38). Paxlovid conferred stable protection during a period in which multiple Omicron subvariants predominated in the United States. Protection against different predominant SARS-CoV-2 subvariants is consistent with Paxlovid’s mechanism of action, which inhibits a highly conserved viral protease (9).

Current guidelines for Paxlovid indicate that persons who are at high risk for progression to severe COVID-19–associated outcomes should be considered for Paxlovid, with older age being a predominant risk factor (10). A study from Israel among persons with mild-to-moderate COVID-19 found comparable benefit from Paxlovid against severe outcomes among persons aged ≥65 years but did not find statistical evidence of protection among younger age groups (3). The current analysis adds to overall evidence of protection from Paxlovid by finding a statistically significant benefit among adults aged 18–64 years, specifically among adults aged 50–64 years with one or more underlying health condition and those aged 18–49 years with two or more underlying health conditions. Although ascertainment of deaths was limited to those with a documented death during the COVID-19 hospital admission, the proportion of persons with in-hospital death was also lower among persons who received Paxlovid (0.01%) than among those who did not (0.04%).

The findings in this report are subject to at least seven limitations. First, receipt of a Paxlovid prescription is a proxy for use of Paxlovid. Paxlovid course completion could not be confirmed, which might bias the results toward the null. Second, dates of diagnosis or test positivity were used to estimate illness onset but might not reflect date of symptom onset, or the presence of mild-to-moderate COVID-19 symptoms. Third, possible inclusion of asymptomatic COVID-19 infection in the nonrecipient comparison group could bias estimates toward the null. Fourth, participants with mild illness might be overrepresented among Paxlovid prescription recipients compared with nonrecipients, given the higher proportion of telemedicine visits, potentially leading to overestimation of protection from Paxlovid; however, a sensitivity analysis restricted to in-person encounters showed similar overall results. Fifth, underlying health conditions and immunocompromise were approximated using ICD-10 codes or medical record fields and might not capture the exact prevalences of these conditions. Sixth, although available vaccination information is automatically collected at each encounter, incomplete information could have limited differences in estimates by vaccination status. Finally, hospitalizations might be incompletely ascertained in Cosmos; this limitation was mitigated by including only persons with previous face-to-face encounters, indicating higher likelihood of hospitalization within a participating health system.

This study demonstrates that Paxlovid provides protection against severe COVID-19–associated outcomes among persons for whom it is recommended, including those with vaccine-conferred immunity, and that it is underutilized among eligible persons with COVID-19. In this analysis, only 28% of eligible persons were prescribed Paxlovid. The ease of oral administration, short duration of therapy, and lower likelihood for resistance make Paxlovid a useful antiviral. Reduction in nonsevere outcomes, such as duration, number, and intensity of COVID-19 symptoms, requires further study. Paxlovid should be offered to eligible persons to protect against COVID-19 hospitalizations, irrespective of vaccination status, and especially among groups with the highest risk for severe outcomes, such as older adults and those with multiple underlying health conditions.

Acknowledgments

Caleb Cox, Epic Research; Michael Feldstein; Stacey Adjei, Tegan Boehmer, Lara Bull, Preetika Rao, Olga Varechtchouk, Kristin Yeoman, CDC.

Corresponding author: Melisa M. Shah, bgn3@cdc.gov.


1Coronavirus and Other Respiratory Viruses Division (proposed), National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, CDC; 2Epic Research, Epic Systems Corporation, Verona, Wisconsin.

All authors have completed and submitted the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors form for disclosure of potential conflicts of interest. No potential conflicts of interest were disclosed.


* These authors contributed equally to this report.

https://cosmos.epic.com/

§ https://www.fda.gov/media/158165/download

ICD-10 codes U07.1, J12.81, J12.82 and Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine–Clinical Terms (SNOMED-CT) code 840539006. Positive SARS-CoV-2 test results could be from a nucleic acid amplification test (NAAT) or an antigen test.

** Telemedicine included virtual, electronic, and telephone encounters. In-person included in-person outpatient encounters not in the urgent care or emergency department setting. Other included all other outpatient encounters which could not be categorized clearly.

†† A previous documented face-to-face encounter suggests a person’s familiarity with and ability to access care in this health system, which was used to increase the likelihood that subsequent hospitalizations were captured.

§§ Underlying health conditions were identified using ICD-10 codes, with two exceptions, obesity and smoking, which were identified using dedicated EHR fields. Persons aged <50 years were required to have at least one underlying health condition to be considered eligible for Paxlovid in this study. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/clinical-care/underlyingconditions.html (Accessed October 24, 2022).

¶¶ Persons with ICD-10 codes consistent with Child-Pugh Class C (indicating advanced hepatic dysfunction) or estimated glomerular filtration rate <30 mL/minute within the past 6 months were considered ineligible to receive Paxlovid. Medications contraindicated with Paxlovid were taken from Food and Drug Administration’s Fact Sheet for Healthcare Providers: Emergency Use Authorization for Paxlovid. https://www.fda.gov/media/155050/download

*** Persons were excluded from the analysis if Paxlovid was prescribed within the 90 days preceding the diagnosis date for the present episode (because of concerns about not capturing the actual COVID-19 diagnosis date), if Paxlovid was prescribed 6–30 days after diagnosis date, or if the patient received other COVID-19–directed therapeutic agents prior to hospitalization.

††† COVID-19 hospitalization was defined as having a COVID-19–specific diagnosis code (ICD-10 U07.1 or SNOMED-CT 840539006) associated with the admission. ARI-associated hospitalizations were defined using ICD-10 codes (adapted from https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2110362).

§§§ https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/placeandhealth/svi/index.html

¶¶¶ Previous infection was defined as a COVID-19 diagnosis code or positive SARS-CoV-2 test result (NAAT or antigen) >90 days earlier. Vaccination categories included 1) unvaccinated if no COVID-19 vaccine had been received; 2) 2 mRNA-dose recipients if ≥14 days had elapsed since receipt of the second dose and no subsequent doses had been received or <7 days since receipt of third dose; 3) ≥3 mRNA-dose recipients if ≥7 days had elapsed since receipt of the third dose; and 4) other recipient if any Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) vaccine, other vaccine, or only 1 mRNA vaccine dose had been received any time before COVID-19 diagnosis. The proportional hazards assumption was evaluated by plotting hazard functions for each variable in the model.

**** 45 C.F.R. part 46, 21 C.F.R. part 56; 42 U.S.C. Sect. 241(d); 5 U.S.C. Sect. 552a; 44 U.S.C. Sect. 3501 et seq.

†††† Immunocompromise was defined using ICD-10 codes (adapted from https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/73/11/e4353/6060064) or immunocompromising medication (adapted from https://www.atsjournals.org/doi/10.1513/AnnalsATS.201507-415BC) prescribed during the past 6 months.

§§§§ COVID-19 hospitalizations occurred a median of 3 days (range = 1–30 days) after diagnosis. For those prescribed Paxlovid who were subsequently hospitalized, hospitalization occurred a median of 5 days after the Paxlovid prescription (range = 1–30 days).

¶¶¶¶ In a sensitivity analysis limited to in-person encounters at the time of diagnosis, aHR was 0.53 (95% CI = 0.48–0.58). In a second sensitivity analysis excluding persons hospitalized during the first 2 days after diagnosis, aHR was 0.63 (95% CI = 0.58–0.69).

References

  1. Food and Drug Administration. Paxlovid emergency use authorization. Silver Spring, MD: Food and Drug Administration; 2022. https://www.fda.gov/media/155049/download
  2. Hammond J, Leister-Tebbe H, Gardner A, et al.; EPIC-HR Investigators. Oral nirmatrelvir for high-risk, nonhospitalized adults with Covid-19. N Engl J Med 2022;386:1397–408. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2118542 PMID:35172054
  3. Arbel R, Wolff Sagy Y, Hoshen M, et al. Nirmatrelvir use and severe Covid-19 outcomes during the Omicron surge. N Engl J Med 2022;387:790–8. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2204919 PMID:36001529
  4. Dryden-Peterson S, Kim A, Kim AY, et al. Nirmatrelvir plus ritonavir for early COVID-19 and hospitalization in a large US health system. medRxiv [Preprint posted June 17, 2022]. https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.06.14.22276393
  5. Lewnard JA, Malden D, Hong V, et al. Effectiveness of nirmatrelvir-ritonavir against hospital admission: a matched cohort study in a large US healthcare system. medRxiv [Preprint posted October 4, 2022]. https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.10.02.22280623
  6. Wong CKH, Au ICH, Lau KTK, Lau EHY, Cowling BJ, Leung GM. Real-world effectiveness of molnupiravir and nirmatrelvir/ritonavir among COVID-19 inpatients during Hong Kong’s Omicron BA.2 wave: an observational study. Lancet Infect Dis 2022;S14373–3099(22)00507–2. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(22)00507-2
  7. Ganatra S, Dani SS, Ahmad J, et al. Oral nirmatrelvir and ritonavir in nonhospitalized vaccinated patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Clin Infect Dis 2022;ciac673. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciac673 PMID:35986628
  8. Najjar-Debbiny R, Gronich N, Weber G, et al. Effectiveness of Paxlovid in reducing severe coronavirus disease 2019 and mortality in high-risk patients. Clin Infect Dis 2022;ciac443. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciac443 PMID:35653428
  9. Vangeel L, Chiu W, De Jonghe S, et al. Remdesivir, molnupiravir and nirmatrelvir remain active against SARS-CoV-2 Omicron and other variants of concern. Antiviral Res 2022;198:105252. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.antiviral.2022.105252 PMID:35085683
  10. Yek C, Warner S, Wiltz JL, et al. Risk factors for severe COVID-19 outcomes among persons aged ≥18 years who completed a primary COVID-19 vaccination series—465 health care facilities, United States, December 2020–October 2021. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2022;71:19–25. https://doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm7101a4 PMID:34990440
Return to your place in the textFIGURE. Identification of patients with COVID-19* who were eligible for treatment with Paxlovid (nirmatrelvir-ritonavir) — Cosmos, United States, April–September 2022
The figure is a flow chart outlining the identification of patient records in the Cosmos data set that were used to examine the association between receiving a Paxlovid (nirmatrelvir-ritonavir) prescription within 5 days of COVID-19 diagnosis and COVID-19–associated hospitalization within 30 days in the United States during April–September 2022.

Abbreviation: NAAT = nucleic acid amplification test.

* Patients were classified as having COVID-19 based on a diagnosis code for COVID-19 or based on a positive SARS-CoV-2 antigen or nucleic acid amplification test. Among 1,713,120 adults aged ≥18 years who met this definition during April 1–August 1, 2022, 930,847 had a diagnosis code only, 159,878 had a positive NAAT result only, 12,874 had a positive antigen test result only, and 609,521 had both a diagnosis code and positive test result (NAAT or antigen test). Exclusions summarized at each level of the flow chart are not mutually exclusive.

Cosmos is an electronic health record dataset that includes information from >160 million persons in U.S. health systems covered by Epic. https://cosmos.epic.com

TABLE 1. Characteristics of persons eligible for Paxlovid (nirmatrelvir-ritonavir) by prescription receipt within 5 days after COVID-19 diagnosis — Cosmos,* United States, April–September 2022Return to your place in the text
Characteristic No. (column %) Standardized mean difference
Paxlovid prescribed
(n = 198,927)
Paxlovid not prescribed
(n = 500,921)
Age group, yrs
18–35 20,543 (10.3) 113,716 (22.7) −0.34
36–49 36,077 (18.1) 107,373 (21.4) −0.08
50–64 66,929 (33.7) 147,274 (29.4) 0.09
≥65 75,378 (37.9) 132,558 (26.5) 0.25
Sex
Female 122,921 (61.8) 316,677 (63.2) −0.03
Male 75,984 (38.2) 184,184 (36.8) 0.03
Race and ethnicity
Black or African American, non-Hispanic 17,141 (8.6) 66,574 (13.3) −0.15
Hispanic or Latino 12,088 (6.1) 38,487 (7.7) −0.06
White, non-Hispanic 158,696 (79.8) 368,109 (73.5) 0.15
Other, non-Hispanic 11,002 (5.5) 27,751 (5.5) 0.00
Social vulnerability index§
0–0.25 (least vulnerable) 58,144 (29.5) 117,590 (23.7) 0.13
0.25–0.50 52,659 (26.7) 124,118 (25.0) 0.04
0.50–0.75 47,755 (24.2) 127,366 (25.7) −0.03
0.75–1.00 (most vulnerable) 38,902 (19.7) 126,632 (25.6) −0.14
U.S. Census Bureau region
Northeast 47,737 (24.0) 134,818 (26.9) −0.07
Midwest 78,925 (39.7) 189,000 (37.7) 0.04
South 51,784 (26.0) 140,818 (28.1) −0.05
West 20,481 (10.3) 36,285 (7.2) 0.11
Outpatient encounter type**
Telemedicine 97,644 (49.1) 91,916 (18.4) 0.69
In-person 56,793 (28.6) 245,004 (48.9) −0.43
Urgent care 1,814 (0.9) 9,094 (1.8) −0.08
Emergency department 19,872 (10.0) 98,359 (19.6) −0.27
Other 22,804 (11.5) 56,548 (11.3) 0.01
Underlying health conditions††
0 16,159 (8.1) 37,072 (7.4) 0.03
1 49,848 (25.1) 152,179 (30.4) −0.12
≥2 132,920 (66.8) 311,670 (62.2) 0.10
Immunocompromised§§
No 179,321 (90.1) 455,616 (91.0) −0.03
Yes 19,606 (9.9) 45,305 (9.0) 0.03
Previous infection¶¶
No 180,373 (90.7) 414,440 (82.7) 0.24
Yes 18,554 (9.3) 86,481 (17.3) −0.24
Obesity
No 100,035 (50.3) 257,590 (51.4) −0.02
Yes 98,892 (49.7) 243,331 (48.6) 0.02
Smoker (current or former)
No 119,770 (60.2) 287,747 (57.4) 0.06
Yes 79,157 (39.8) 213,174 (42.6) −0.06
Diabetes
No 161,177 (81.0) 424,246 (84.7) −0.10
Yes 37,750 (19.0) 76,675 (15.3) 0.10
COVID-19 vaccination status***
≥3 mRNA doses 119,324 (60.0) 209,614 (41.9) 0.37
2 mRNA doses 36,924 (18.6) 115,444 (23.1) −0.11
Unvaccinated 30,619 (15.4) 141,931 (28.3) −0.32
Other 12,060 (6.1) 33,932 (6.8) −0.03
Month of COVID-19 diagnosis
Apr 2022 10,581 (5.3) 50,116 (10.0) −0.18
May 2022 36,326 (18.3) 104,105 (20.8) −0.06
Jun 2022 40,747 (20.5) 104,418 (20.9) −0.01
Jul 2022 58,961 (29.6) 126,991 (25.4) 0.10
Aug 2022 52,312 (26.3) 115,291 (23.0) 0.08

* Cosmos is an electronic health record dataset that includes information from >160 million persons in U.S. health systems covered by Epic. https://cosmos.epic.com
Includes American Indian or Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, or Asian, or other race.
§ https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/placeandhealth/svi/index.html
https://www2.census.gov/geo/pdfs/maps-data/maps/reference/us_regdiv.pdf
** Telemedicine included virtual, electronic, and telephone encounters. In-person included in-person outpatient encounters not in the urgent care or emergency department setting. Other included all other outpatient encounters which could not be categorized clearly.
†† https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/clinical-care/underlyingconditions.html (Accessed October 24, 2022).
§§ Immunocompromised status was defined using International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision codes (adapted from https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/73/11/e4353/6060064 or immunocompromising medication prescribed in the past 6 months (adapted from https://www.atsjournals.org/doi/10.1513/AnnalsATS.201507-415BC).
¶¶ Previous infection was defined as a COVID-19 diagnosis code or positive COVID-19 nucleic acid amplification test result or antigen test result >90 days before the current diagnosis.
*** Vaccination categories included 1) unvaccinated if no COVID-19 vaccine had been received; 2) 2 mRNA dose-recipients if ≥14 days had elapsed after the second dose and no subsequent doses had been received or <7 days since receipt of third dose; 3) ≥3 mRNA dose-recipients if ≥7 days had elapsed since receipt of the third dose; and 4) other recipient if any Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) vaccine, other vaccine, or 1 mRNA vaccine dose had been received any time before COVID-19 diagnosis.

TABLE 2. Adjusted hazard ratios for COVID-19–associated hospitalization based on Paxlovid prescription receipt (exposure) — Cosmos,* United States, April–September 2022Return to your place in the text
Characteristic Adjusted HR (95% CI) No. of participants No. hospitalized Events per 100,000 person-days
Overall Exposed§ Unexposed§
Total 0.49 (0.46–0.53) 693,084 5,229 25.31 15.88 29.05
COVID-19 vaccination status
Vaccinated (≥3 mRNA doses) 0.50 (0.45–0.55) 310,196 2,126 22.98 14.30 27.87
Vaccinated (2 mRNA doses) 0.50 (0.42–0.58) 149,498 1,086 24.37 16.37 26.92
Unvaccinated 0.50 (0.43–0.59) 170,789 1,477 29.05 19.60 31.08
UHC**
0 0.89 (0.58–1.36) 52,592 106 6.73 6.51 6.83
1 0.57 (0.45–0.71) 200,116 503 8.40 6.46 9.03
≥2 0.47 (0.44–0.51) 440,376 4,620 35.29 20.56 41.57
Previous infection††
No 0.48 (0.44–0.51) 589,147 4,715 26.86 16.12 31.53
Yes 0.76 (0.60–0.98) 103,937 514 16.56 13.54 17.20
Immunocompromised§§
No 0.49 (0.45–0.53) 628,706 3,770 20.09 12.61 23.03
Yes 0.50 (0.44–0.58) 64,378 1,459 77.01 45.99 90.49
Month of COVID-19 diagnosis
Apr 2022 0.54 (0.40–0.71) 60,001 450 25.16 17.77 26.71
May 2022 0.57 (0.48–0.67) 139,062 979 23.61 17.06 25.88
Jun 2022 0.51 (0.43–0.60) 143,706 1,006 23.48 15.02 26.76
Jul 2022 0.46 (0.40–0.53) 184,153 1,432 26.09 15.65 30.94
Aug 2022 0.44 (0.38–0.51) 166,162 1,362 27.52 15.60 32.93
Age group, yrs
18–49 0.59 (0.48–0.71) 275,930 886 10.73 6.99 11.68
50–64 0.40 (0.34–0.48) 211,940 1,032 16.30 7.90 20.10
≥65 0.53 (0.48–0.58) 205,214 3,311 54.56 29.72 68.80
By age group, yrs
18–49
Vaccinated (≥3 mRNA doses) 0.75 (0.53–1.06) 84,054 178 7.07 6.10 7.46
Vaccinated (2 mRNA doses) 0.53 (0.35–0.82) 70,159 198 9.43 6.20 10.16
Unvaccinated 0.54 (0.39–0.76) 97,637 417 14.29 9.09 15.13
1 UHC 0.91 (0.58–1.44) 109,620 157 4.78 4.11 4.91
≥2 UHC 0.54 (0.43–0.67) 166,310 729 14.67 8.35 16.54
50–64
Vaccinated (≥3 mRNA doses) 0.41 (0.30–0.55) 98,699 284 9.61 5.28 12.11
Vaccinated (2 mRNA doses) 0.46 (0.33–0.63) 47,111 265 18.84 10.96 21.89
Unvaccinated 0.38 (0.27–0.53) 45,154 355 26.39 12.43 30.35
No UHC 1.11 (0.46–2.68) 32,519 25 2.56 2.87 2.46
1 UHC 0.30 (0.17–0.55) 53,493 109 6.80 2.45 8.72
≥2 UHC 0.40 (0.33–0.48) 125,928 898 23.91 11.04 30.26
≥65
Vaccinated (≥3 mRNA doses) 0.51 (0.46–0.57) 127,443 1,664 44.02 24.51 57.35
Vaccinated (2 mRNA doses) 0.53 (0.43–0.65) 32,228 623 65.58 36.83 78.59
Unvaccinated 0.58 (0.47–0.72) 27,998 705 85.92 52.75 96.15
No UHC 0.84 (0.51–1.36) 20,073 81 13.50 10.34 15.49
1 UHC 0.63 (0.47–0.85) 37,003 237 21.47 13.66 26.77
≥2 UHC 0.51 (0.47–0.56) 148,138 2,993 68.58 37.33 85.48

Abbreviations: HR = hazard ratio; UHC = underlying health condition.
* Cosmos is an electronic health record dataset that includes information from >160 million persons in U.S. health systems covered by Epic. https://cosmos.epic.com
95% CIs that exclude 1 were considered to be statistically significant. Multivariable models were adjusted for age, sex, race and ethnicity, social vulnerability index, number of underlying health conditions, U.S. Census Bureau region of residence, previous infection, and COVID-19 vaccination status, excluding the stratum of interest.
§ Persons receiving Paxlovid contributed unexposed time until the prescription date and exposed time after the prescription date; those not receiving Paxlovid contributed unexposed time. Follow-up time ended when a hospitalization occurred or at 30-days after diagnosis, whichever came first.
Vaccination categories included 1) unvaccinated if no COVID-19 vaccine had been received; 2) 2 mRNA-dose recipients if ≥14 days had elapsed after the second dose and no subsequent doses had been received or <7 days since receipt of third dose; 3) ≥3 mRNA-dose recipients if ≥7 days had elapsed since receipt of the third dose; and 4) other recipient if any Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) vaccine, other vaccine, or 1 mRNA vaccine dose had been received any time before COVID-19 diagnosis.
** https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/clinical-care/underlyingconditions.html (Accessed October 24, 2022).
†† Previous infection was defined as a COVID-19 diagnosis code or positive COVID-19 nucleic acid amplification test result or antigen test result >90 days before the current diagnosis.
§§ Immunocompromised status was defined using International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision codes (adapted from https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/73/11/e4353/6060064 or immunocompromising medication prescribed during the past 6 months (adapted from https://www.atsjournals.org/doi/10.1513/AnnalsATS.201507-415BC).


Suggested citation for this article: Shah MM, Joyce B, Plumb ID, et al. Paxlovid Associated with Decreased Hospitalization Rate Among Adults with COVID-19 — United States, April–September 2022. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2022;71:1531–1537. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm7148e2.

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