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Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Convalescent Plasma Versus Standard Plasma in Coronavirus Disease 2019 Infected Hospitalized Patients in New York: A Double-Blind Randomized Trial∗

  • Elliott Bennett-Guerrero
  • , Jamie L. Romeiser
  • , Lillian R. Talbot
  • , Tahmeena Ahmed
  • , Linda J. Mamone
  • , Sunitha M. Singh
  • , Janet C. Hearing
  • , Huda Salman
  • , Dishaw D. Holiprosad
  • , Alex T. Freedenberg
  • , Jason A. Carter
  • , Nicholas J. Browne
  • , Megan E. Cosgrove
  • , Margaret E. Shevik
  • , Laura M. Generale
  • , Margaret A. Andrew
  • , Sharon Nachman
  • , Bettina C. Fries
  • , Elliott Bennett-Guerrero
  • , Tahmeena Ahmed
  • Jamie Romeiser, Huda Salman, Lisa Senzel, Eric Spitzer, Giuseppina Caravella, Laura Harper, Diana Kaell, Melanie Keister, David Komatsu, Jessica Lamb, Deidre Lee, Jane O'keefe, Ajish Pallai, Elizabeth Roemer, William Scherl, Sandra Skinner, Leah Smith-Mcallister, Molly Rago, Margaret Brand, Andrew Bryan, Lauren Festa, Susan Fiore, Shannen Harbourne, Audrey Hecker-Crawford, Ann Lavorna, Caryn Mckenna, Robert Repetti, Curtis Roggemann, Haseena Sahib, Margaret Shevik, Sunitha Singh, Ruth Stein, Kathy Vivas, Margaret Andrew, Audrey Anderson, Joan Arata, Marlene Baumeister, Susan Boudreau, Patricia Brill, Noelle Daley, Christine Gearwar, Laura Generale, Darcy Halper, Erin J. Healy, Coleen Letscher, Dawn Madigan, Katherine Markarian-Askinazi, Ana Mavarez-Martinez, Sebastian Munoz, Christine Pol, Grace Propper, Dishaw Holiprosad, Rajeev Fernando, Nandini Seshan, Sophia Pham, Lillian Talbot, Nicholas Browne, Jason Carter, Megan Cosgrove, Alex Freedenberg, Andrew Sisti, Suman Grewal, Caterina Vacchi-Suzzi, Angie Wong, Robert Califf, Nicholas Bandarenko, Timothy Mcmahon, Wei Hou
  • Stony Brook University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

59 Scopus citations

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Four peer-reviewed publications have reported results from randomized controlled trials of convalescent plasma for coronavirus disease 2019 infection; none were conducted in the United States nor used standard plasma as a comparator. To determine if administration of convalescent plasma to patients with coronavirus disease 2019 increases antibodies to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 and improves outcome. DESIGN: Double-blind randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Hospital in New York. PATIENTS: Patients with polymerase chain reaction documented coronavirus disease 2019 infection. INTERVENTIONS: Patients were randomized (4:1) to receive 2 U of convalescent plasma versus standard plasma. Antibodies to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 were measured in plasma units and in trial recipients. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Enrollment was terminated after emergency use authorization was granted for convalescent plasma. Seventy-four patients were randomized. At baseline, mean (sd) Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II score (23.4 [5.6] and 22.5 [6.6]), percent of patients intubated (19% and 20%), and median (interquartile range) days from symptom onset to randomization of 9 (6-18) and 9 (6-15), were similar in the convalescent plasma versus standard plasma arms, respectively. Convalescent plasma had high neutralizing activity (median [interquartile range] titer 1:526 [1:359-1:786]) and its administration increased antibodies to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 by 14.4%, whereas standard plasma administration led to an 8.6% decrease (p = 0.005). No difference was observed for ventilator-free days through 28 days (primary study endpoint): Median (interquartile range) of 28 (2-28) versus 28 (0-28; p = 0.86) for the convalescent plasma and standard plasma groups, respectively. A greater than or equal to 2 point improvement in the World Health Organization scale was achieved by 20% of subjects in both arms (p = 0.99). All-cause mortality through 90 days was numerically lower in the convalescent plasma versus standard plasma groups (27% vs 33%; p = 0.63) but did not achieve statistical significance. A key prespecified subgroup analysis of time to death in patients who were intubated at baseline was statistically significant; however, sample size numbers were small. CONCLUSIONS: Administration of convalescent plasma to hospitalized patients with coronavirus disease 2019 infection increased antibodies to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease 2 but was not associated with improved outcome.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1015-1025
Number of pages11
JournalCritical Care Medicine
Volume49
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 1 2021

Keywords

  • convalescent plasma
  • coronavirus disease 2019
  • infection
  • randomized

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