Author: Tremblay, Douglas; Seah, Carina; Schneider, Thomas; Bhalla, Sheena; Feld, Jonathan; Naymagon, Leonard; Wang, Bo; Patel, Vaibhav; Jun, Tomi; Jandl, Thomas; Rahman, Farah; Liu, Sean T. H.; Aberg, Judith A.; Bouvier, Nicole
Title: Convalescent Plasma for the Treatment of Severe COVIDâ€19 Infection in Cancer Patients Cord-id: wnmd0t1t Document date: 2020_9_17
ID: wnmd0t1t
Snippet: BACKGROUND: Patients with malignancy are particularly vulnerable to infection with Severe Acute Respiratory Diseaseâ€Coronavirusâ€2 (SARSâ€CoVâ€2) given their immunodeficiency secondary to their underlying disease and cancerâ€directed therapy. We report a case series of patients with cancer who received convalescent plasma, an investigational therapy for severe Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19). METHODS: Patients with cancer were identified who received convalescent plasma. Enrolled pat
Document: BACKGROUND: Patients with malignancy are particularly vulnerable to infection with Severe Acute Respiratory Diseaseâ€Coronavirusâ€2 (SARSâ€CoVâ€2) given their immunodeficiency secondary to their underlying disease and cancerâ€directed therapy. We report a case series of patients with cancer who received convalescent plasma, an investigational therapy for severe Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19). METHODS: Patients with cancer were identified who received convalescent plasma. Enrolled patients had confirmed COVIDâ€19 with severe or lifeâ€threatening disease and were transfused with convalescent plasma from donors with a SARSâ€CoVâ€2 antiâ€spike antibody titer of ≥ 1:320 dilution. Oxygen requirements and clinical outcomes of interests were captured as well as laboratory parameters at baseline and 3 days after treatment. RESULTS: We identified 24 patients with cancer, 14 of whom had a hematological malignancy, who were treated with convalescent plasma. Fifteen patients (62.5%) were on cancerâ€directed treatment at the time of COVIDâ€19 infection. After a median of hospital duration of 9 days, 13 patients (54.2%) had been discharged home, 1 patient (4.2%) was still hospitalized, and 10 patients had died (41.7%). Nonâ€intubated patients, particularly those on nasal cannula alone, had favorable outcomes. Three mild febrile nonâ€hemolytic transfusion reactions were observed. Câ€reactive protein significantly decreased after 3 days of treatment, while other laboratory parameters including ferritin and Dâ€dimer remained unchanged. CONCLUSIONS: Convalescent plasma may be a promising therapy in cancer patients with COVIDâ€19.
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