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A Randomized Trial of Convalescent Plasma in Covid-19 Severe Pneumonia

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Title

A Randomized Trial of Convalescent Plasma in Covid-19 Severe Pneumonia

Subject

Description

Convalescent plasma is frequently administered to patients with Covid-19 and has been reported, largely on the basis of observational data, to improve clinical outcomes. Minimal data are available from adequately powered randomized, controlled trials.

Source

Simonovich, Ventura A., Leandro D. Burgos Pratx, Paula Scibona, María V. Beruto, Marcelo G. Vallone, Carolina Vázquez, Nadia Savoy, Diego H. Giunta, Lucía G. Pérez, Marisa del L. Sánchez, Andrea Vanesa Gamarnik, Diego S. Ojeda, Diego M. Santoro, Pablo J. Camino, Sebastian Antelo, Karina Rainero, Gabriela P. Vidiella, Erica A. Miyazaki, Wanda Cornistein, Omar A. Trabadelo, Fernando M. Ross, Mariano Spotti, Gabriel Funtowicz, Walter E. Scordo, Marcelo H. Losso, Inés Ferniot, Pablo E. Pardo, Eulalia Rodriguez, Pablo Rucci, Julieta Pasquali, Nora A. Fuentes, Mariano Esperatti, Gerardo A. Speroni, Esteban C. Nannini, Alejandra Matteaccio, Hernán G. Michelangelo, Dean Follmann, H. Clifford Lane, and Waldo H. Belloso.

Date

2021-02-18

Citation

Simonovich, Ventura A., Leandro D. Burgos Pratx, Paula Scibona, María V. Beruto, Marcelo G. Vallone, Carolina Vázquez, Nadia Savoy, Diego H. Giunta, Lucía G. Pérez, Marisa del L. Sánchez, Andrea Vanesa Gamarnik, Diego S. Ojeda, Diego M. Santoro, Pablo J. Camino, Sebastian Antelo, Karina Rainero, Gabriela P. Vidiella, Erica A. Miyazaki, Wanda Cornistein, Omar A. Trabadelo, Fernando M. Ross, Mariano Spotti, Gabriel Funtowicz, Walter E. Scordo, Marcelo H. Losso, Inés Ferniot, Pablo E. Pardo, Eulalia Rodriguez, Pablo Rucci, Julieta Pasquali, Nora A. Fuentes, Mariano Esperatti, Gerardo A. Speroni, Esteban C. Nannini, Alejandra Matteaccio, Hernán G. Michelangelo, Dean Follmann, H. Clifford Lane, and Waldo H. Belloso. 2020. "A Randomized Trial of Convalescent Plasma in Covid-19 Severe Pneumonia." New England Journal of Medicine 384 (7):619-29.

Abstract

Background

Convalescent plasma is frequently administered to patients with Covid-19 and has been reported, largely on the basis of observational data, to improve clinical outcomes. Minimal data are available from adequately powered randomized, controlled trials.

Methods

We randomly assigned hospitalized adult patients with severe Covid-19 pneumonia in a 2:1 ratio to receive convalescent plasma or placebo. The primary outcome was the patient’s clinical status 30 days after the intervention, as measured on a six-point ordinal scale ranging from total recovery to death.

Results

A total of 228 patients were assigned to receive convalescent plasma and 105 to receive placebo. The median time from the onset of symptoms to enrollment in the trial was 8 days (interquartile range, 5 to 10), and hypoxemia was the most frequent severity criterion for enrollment. The infused convalescent plasma had a median titer of 1:3200 of total SARS-CoV-2 antibodies (interquartile range, 1:800 to 1:3200). No patients were lost to follow-up. At day 30 day, no significant difference was noted between the convalescent plasma group and the placebo group in the distribution of clinical outcomes according to the ordinal scale (odds ratio, 0.83; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.52 to 1.35; P=0.46). Overall mortality was 10.96% in the convalescent plasma group and 11.43% in the placebo group, for a risk difference of −0.46 percentage points (95% CI, −7.8 to 6.8). Total SARS-CoV-2 antibody titers tended to be higher in the convalescent plasma group at day 2 after the intervention. Adverse events and serious adverse events were similar in the two groups.

Conclusions

No significant differences were observed in clinical status or overall mortality between patients treated with convalescent plasma and those who received placebo. (PlasmAr ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04383535. opens in new tab.)

Accessibility

Free online on NEJM.

Collection