Author: Subbarao, Kanta; Mordant, Francesca; Rudraraju, Rajeev
Title: Convalescent plasma treatment for COVID-19: tempering expectations with the influenza experience. Cord-id: 7nujnnsw Document date: 2020_9_4
ID: 7nujnnsw
Snippet: The COVID-19 pandemic caused by the zoonotic coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2 has swept the world in 5 months. A proportion of cases develop severe respiratory tract infections progressing to acute respiratory distress syndrome and a diverse set of complications involving different organ systems. Faced with a lack of coronavirus-specific antiviral drugs and vaccines, hundreds of clinical trials have been undertaken to evaluate repurposed drugs. Convalescent plasma from recovered patients is an attractive
Document: The COVID-19 pandemic caused by the zoonotic coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2 has swept the world in 5 months. A proportion of cases develop severe respiratory tract infections progressing to acute respiratory distress syndrome and a diverse set of complications involving different organ systems. Faced with a lack of coronavirus-specific antiviral drugs and vaccines, hundreds of clinical trials have been undertaken to evaluate repurposed drugs. Convalescent plasma from recovered patients is an attractive option because antibodies can have direct or indirect antiviral activity and immunotherapy works well in principle, in animal models and in anecdotal reports. However, the benefits of convalescent plasma treatment can only be clearly established through carefully designed randomised clinical trials. The experience from investigations of convalescent plasma products for severe influenza offers a cautionary tale. Despite promising pilot studies, large multicentre randomised controlled trials failed to show a benefit of convalescent plasma or hyperimmune intravenous globulin for the treatment of severe influenza A virus infection. These studies provide important lessons that should inform the planning of adequately powered randomised controlled trials to evaluate the promise of convalescent plasma therapy in COVID-19 patients. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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