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The feasibility of convalescent plasma therapy in severe COVID- 19 patients: a pilot study

Authors :
Yue Wang
Yeqin Hu
Jianhong Yu
Wei Zhang
Shihe Huang
Kai Duan
Jifeng Hou
Hu Yong
Min Zhou
Huajun Zhang
Zejun Wang
Jiayou Zhang
Shengli Meng
Kun Deng
Huichuan Yang
Lianghao Zhang
Yanping Yu
Sai-Juan Chen
Zhou Zhijun
Ding Yu
Li Li
Xiaoxiao Gao
Xinxin Zhang
Bende Liu
Xiaoming Yang
Peng Yan
Zhengli Shi
Li Cesheng
Li Chen
Mingchao Yuan
Xiaobei Zheng
Ying Liu
Jinyan Huang
Dongbo Zhou
Cheng Peng
Wei Chen
Xuefei Liu
Xiao Wu
Jieming Qu
Bei Li
Xiaoqi Yu
Lin Lianzhen
Zhang Zhi
Zhiwu Xia
Ting Yu
Dan Wang
Gong Qin
Zhu Chen
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Currently, there are no approved specific antiviral agents for 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19). In this study, ten severe patients confirmed by real-time viral RNA test were enrolled prospectively. One dose of 200 mL convalescent plasma (CP) derived from recently recovered donors with the neutralizing antibody titers above 1:640 was transfused to the patients as an addition to maximal supportive care and antiviral agents. The primary endpoint was the safety of CP transfusion. The second endpoints were the improvement of clinical symptoms and laboratory parameters within 3 days after CP transfusion. The median time from onset of illness to CP transfusion was 16.5 days. After CP transfusion, the level of neutralizing antibody increased rapidly up to 1:640 in five cases, while that of the other four cases maintained at a high level (1:640). The clinical symptoms were significantly improved along with increase of oxyhemoglobin saturation within 3 days. Several parameters tended to improve as compared to pre-transfusion, including increased lymphocyte counts (0.65×109/L vs. 0.76×109/L) and decreased C-reactive protein (55.98 mg/L vs. 18.13 mg/L). Radiological examinations showed varying degrees of absorption of lung lesionswithin 7 days. The viral load was undetectable after transfusion in seven patients who had previous viremia. No severe adverse effects were observed. This study showed CP therapy was welltolerated and could potentially improve the clinical outcomes through neutralizing viremia in severe COVID-19 cases. The optimal dose and time point, as well as the clinical benefit of CP therapy, needs further investigation in larger well-controlled trials.Significance StatementCOVID-19 is currently a big threat to global health. However, no specific antiviral agents are available for its treatment. In this work, we explored the feasibility of convalescent plasma (CP) transfusion to rescue severe patients. The results from 10 severe adult cases showed that one dose (200 mL) of CP was welltolerated and could significantly increase or maintain the neutralizing antibodies at a high level, leading to disappearance of viremia in 7 days. Meanwhile, clinical symptoms and paraclinical criteria rapidly improved within 3 days. Radiological examination showed varying degrees of absorption of lung lesions within 7 days. These results indicate that CP can serve as a promising rescue option for severe COVID-19 while the randomized trial is warranted.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d5c8894b04b082dfebea4d3f411d6129