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Randomized Controlled Trial of Early Outpatient COVID-19 Treatment with High-Titer Convalescent Plasma

Authors :
David J. Sullivan
Kelly A. Gebo
Shmuel Shoham
Evan M. Bloch
Bryan Lau
Aarthi G. Shenoy
Giselle S. Mosnaim
Thomas J. Gniadek
Yuriko Fukuta
Bela Patel
Sonya L. Heath
Adam C. Levine
Barry R. Meisenberg
Emily S. Spivak
Shweta Anjan
Moises A. Huaman
Janis E. Blair
Judith S. Currier
James H. Paxton
Jonathan M. Gerber
Joann R. Petrini
Patrick B. Broderick
William Rausch
Marie Elena Cordisco
Jean Hammel
Benjamin Greenblatt
Valerie C. Cluzet
Daniel Cruser
Kevin Oei
Matthew Abinante
Laura L. Hammitt
Catherine G. Sutcliffe
Donald N. Forthal
Martin S. Zand
Edward R. Cachay
Jay S. Raval
Seble G. Kassaye
E. Colin Foster
Michael Roth
Christi E. Marshall
Anusha Yarava
Karen Lane
Nichol A. McBee
Amy L. Gawad
Nicky Karlen
Atika Singh
Daniel E. Ford
Douglas A. Jabs
Lawrence J. Appel
David M. Shade
Stephan Ehrhardt
Sheriza N. Baksh
Oliver Laeyendecker
Andrew Pekosz
Sabra L. Klein
Arturo Casadevall
Aaron A.R. Tobian
Daniel F. Hanley
Source :
medRxiv
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUNDThe efficacy of polyclonal high titer convalescent plasma to prevent serious complications of COVID-19 in outpatients with recent onset of illness is uncertain.METHODSThis multicenter, double-blind randomized controlled trial compared the efficacy and safety of SARS-CoV-2 high titer convalescent plasma to placebo control plasma in symptomatic adults ≥18 years positive for SARS-CoV-2 regardless of risk factors for disease progression or vaccine status. Participants with symptom onset within 8 days were enrolled, then transfused within the subsequent day. The measured primary outcome was COVID-19-related hospitalization within 28 days of plasma transfusion. The enrollment period was June 3, 2020 to October 1, 2021.RESULTSA total of 1225 participants were randomized and 1181 transfused. In the pre-specified modified intention-to-treat analysis that excluded those not transfused, the primary endpoint occurred in 37 of 589 (6.3%) who received placebo control plasma and in 17 of 592 (2.9%) participants who received convalescent plasma (relative risk, 0.46; one-sided 95% upper bound confidence interval 0.733; P=0.004) corresponding to a 54% risk reduction. Examination with a model adjusting for covariates related to the outcome did not change the conclusions.CONCLUSIONEarly administration of high titer SARS-CoV-2 convalescent plasma reduced outpatient hospitalizations by more than 50%. High titer convalescent plasma is an effective early outpatient COVID-19 treatment with the advantages of low cost, wide availability, and rapid resilience to variant emergence from viral genetic drift in the face of a changing pandemic.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04373460.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
medRxiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e60a0b0a1d17871ffa6da31d8996ec5c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.12.10.21267485