Volume 28, Number 5—May 2022
Letter
High-Dose Convalescent Plasma for Treatment of Severe COVID-19
To the Editor: We commend our colleagues in Brazil for completing a multicenter, open-label, randomized controlled trial (RCT) of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) convalescent plasma (CCP) against wild-type severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) (1). This RCT had some strengths, including use of high-dose CCP (600 mL CCP for 3 days at a median neutralizing antibody titer of 1:128). The overall results were negative, but the authors caution that this finding probably reflects inclusion of patients late in disease, as evident by enrollment criteria (oxygen saturation <93%, partial pressure of oxygen/fraction of inspired oxygen <300, or need for mechanical ventilation), median transfusion at day 9 after symptom onset, 100% seropositivity, and 35% requiring hemodialysis at enrollment. The severity of disease in those patients means that disease was driven by inflammation as opposed to ongoing virus replication. To date, 2 CCP RCTs have shown benefit, 1 that provided outpatient treatment (D. Sullivan, et al., unpub. data, https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.12.10.2126748v1) and 1 that provided inpatient treatment within 3 days of symptom onset (2). Hence, we caution against negative conclusions about the efficacy of CCP based on these data.
We find it remarkable that despite late CCP use, the authors observed a lower mortality rate among CCP-treated patients (31%) than controls (35%), given that the prevailing view is that this therapy functions as an antiviral and should not be effective in late disease. A similar finding is apparent in most other RCTs of hospitalized patients (3). This reduced mortality rate did not reach statistical significance because of the low sample size, which was estimated by assuming a 50% reduction in mortality rate from the intervention, much higher than that assumed in the RCTs of anti-spike monoclonal antibodies (typically in the range of 20%); further, recruitment was halted at 110 out of 120 patients. A recent article suggests that there is a population with high World Health Organization severity scores that benefits from CCP (4). We wonder if the authors can reanalyze their data by using the treatment benefit calculator (https://covid-convalescentplasma-tbi-calc.org) (4) to gain more insight into whether a small subset of patients benefited from CCP.
Acknowledgments
A.C. was a co-investigator in the CSSC-004 RCT. D.F. was a co-investigator in the TSUNAMI RCT.
D.F. conceived the manuscript and wrote the first draft. A.C. revised the manuscript.
References
- De Santis GC, Oliveira LC, Garibaldi PMM, Almado CEL, Croda J, Arcanjo GGA, et al. High-dose convalescent plasma for treatment of severe COVID-19. Emerg Infect Dis. 2022;28:548–55. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
- Arnold Egloff SA, Junglen A, Restivo JSA, Wongskhauluang M, Martin C, Doshi P, et al. Association of convalescent plasma treatment with reduced mortality and improved clinical trajectory in patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in the community setting. JAMA. 2021;325:1185–95. DOIGoogle Scholar
- Focosi D, Franchini M, Pirofski LA, Burnouf T, Paneth N, Joyner MJ, et al. COVID-19 convalescent plasma and clinical trials: understanding conflicting outcomes. Clin Microbiol Rev. 2022;•••:
e0020021 . DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar - Park H, Tarpey T, Liu M, Goldfeld K, Wu Y, Wu D, et al. Development and validation of a treatment benefit index to identify hospitalized patients with COVID-19 who may benefit from convalescent plasma. JAMA Netw Open. 2022;5:
e2147375 . DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
Original Publication Date: April 11, 2022
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Table of Contents – Volume 28, Number 5—May 2022
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Please use the form below to submit correspondence to the authors or contact them at the following address:
Daniele Focosi, Pisa University Hospital, Building 2K, via Paradisa 2, 56124 Pisa, Italy
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