- Zhang, Xiao-Jing;
- Qin, Juan-Juan;
- Cheng, Xu;
- Shen, Lijun;
- Zhao, Yan-Ci;
- Yuan, Yufeng;
- Lei, Fang;
- Chen, Ming-Ming;
- Yang, Huilin;
- Bai, Liangjie;
- Song, Xiaohui;
- Lin, Lijin;
- Xia, Meng;
- Zhou, Feng;
- Zhou, Jianghua;
- She, Zhi-Gang;
- Zhu, Lihua;
- Ma, Xinliang;
- Xu, Qingbo;
- Ye, Ping;
- Chen, Guohua;
- Liu, Liming;
- Mao, Weiming;
- Yan, Youqin;
- Xiao, Bing;
- Lu, Zhigang;
- Peng, Gang;
- Liu, Mingyu;
- Yang, Jun;
- Yang, Luyu;
- Zhang, Changjiang;
- Lu, Haofeng;
- Xia, Xigang;
- Wang, Daihong;
- Liao, Xiaofeng;
- Wei, Xiang;
- Zhang, Bing-Hong;
- Zhang, Xin;
- Yang, Juan;
- Zhao, Guang-Nian;
- Zhang, Peng;
- Liu, Peter P;
- Loomba, Rohit;
- Ji, Yan-Xiao;
- Xia, Jiahong;
- Wang, Yibin;
- Cai, Jingjing;
- Guo, Jiao;
- Li, Hongliang
Statins are lipid-lowering therapeutics with favorable anti-inflammatory profiles and have been proposed as an adjunct therapy for COVID-19. However, statins may increase the risk of SARS-CoV-2 viral entry by inducing ACE2 expression. Here, we performed a retrospective study on 13,981 patients with COVID-19 in Hubei Province, China, among which 1,219 received statins. Based on a mixed-effect Cox model after propensity score-matching, we found that the risk for 28-day all-cause mortality was 5.2% and 9.4% in the matched statin and non-statin groups, respectively, with an adjusted hazard ratio of 0.58. The statin use-associated lower risk of mortality was also observed in the Cox time-varying model and marginal structural model analysis. These results give support for the completion of ongoing prospective studies and randomized controlled trials involving statin treatment for COVID-19, which are needed to further validate the utility of this class of drugs to combat the mortality of this pandemic.