Title

Convalescent Plasma Trial in COVID -19 Patients
Use of Convalescent Plasma Therapy for COVID-19 Patients With Hypoxia: a Prospective Randomized Trial
  • Phase

    N/A
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Study Participants

    40
Plasma therapy using convalescent plasma has been shown to be effective in severe acute respiratory syndrome, Ebola virus infection and in H1N1 influenza. More recently there has been a report of the use of convalescent plasma in the treatment of 5 ventilated COVID-19 patients with the suggestion of expedited recovery as the patients improved 1 week after the transfusion. However, this was not a clinical trial and the patients were on other antiviral medication.; therefore, there is a need to undertake such a trial to see if deploying plasma with SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibody has utility in managing patients infected with COVID-19 in respiratory distress.

The objective of this pilot study is to compare plasma therapy using convalescent plasma with antibody against SARS-CoV-2 to usual supportive therapy in COVID-19 patients with pneumonia and hypoxia, and to determine if the clinical course is improved. The difference between groups will allow an effect size to be determined for a definitive clinical trial.
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and has developed into a pandemic with serious global public health and economic sequelae. As of March 30, 2020, over 750,000 cases have been confirmed worldwide leading to over 34,000 deaths (https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html). There is no current vaccine available, but there have been a number of reports of medication such as hydroxychloroquine having antiviral properties with efficacy against SARS-CoV-2.

Plasma therapy using convalescent plasma has been shown to be effective in severe acute respiratory syndrome, Ebola virus infection and in H1N1 influenza. More recently there has been a report of the use of convalescent plasma in the treatment of 5 ventilated COVID-19 patients with the suggestion of expedited recovery as the patients improved 1 week after the transfusion. However, this was not a clinical trial and the patients were on other antiviral medication; therefore, there is a need to undertake such a trial to see if deploying plasma with SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibody has utility in managing patients infected with COVID-19 in respiratory distress.

The objective of this pilot study is to compare plasma therapy using convalescent plasma with antibody against SARS-CoV-2 to usual supportive therapy in COVID-19 patients with pneumonia and hypoxia, and to determine if the clinical course is improved. The difference between groups will allow an effect size to be determined for a definitive clinical trial

Could using convalescent plasma transfusion, from recovered COVID19 patients with antibody against COVID-19 be beneficial in treatment of COVID19 patients with hypoxia and pneumonia, in order to avoid or delay the need for invasive ventilation?

This is a prospective, interventional and randomized open label trial involving 40 patients with COVID-19 who are in respiratory distress, with the criteria that all require oxygen therapy and have radiological evidence of pneumonia, 20 of whom will receive a single transfusion of convalescent patient plasma plus routine care, compared to 20 COVID-19 patients who will receive routine care alone.
Study Started
Apr 19
2020
Primary Completion
Jun 15
2020
Study Completion
Jul 09
2020
Last Update
Oct 26
2021

Other plasma therapy using convalescent plasma with antibody against SARS-CoV-2

convalescent patient plasma plus routine local standard of care

Other Routine care for COVID-19 patients

local standard of care which include antivirals and supportive care

Control group Active Comparator

local standard of care which include antivirals and supportive care

Intervention group Experimental

convalescent patient plasma 400ml given as 200ml over 2 hours in 2 consecutive days, plus routine local standard of care

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

COVID-19 diagnosis
Hypoxia, (Oxygen saturation of less than or equal 92% or PO2 < 60mmHg on arterial blood gas analysis) and patient requiring oxygen therapy
Evidence of infiltrates on Chest Xray or CT scan
Able to give informed consent
Patients between the ages of 21 and above with no upper age.

Exclusion Criteria:

Patients with mild disease not requiring oxygen therapy
Patients with normal CXR & CT scan
Patients requiring ventilatory support
Patients with a history of allergy to plasma, sodium citrate or methylene blue
Patients with a history of autoimmune disease or selective IGA deficiency.
No Results Posted