Iran Daily

Plasma from recovered patients shows little benefit in those hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19: Study

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Using blood plasma from COVID-19 survivors to treat patients with severe pneumonia caused by the novel coronaviru­s showed little benefit, according to data released from a clinical trial in Argentina.

The therapy know as convalesce­nt plasma, which delivers antibodies from COVID-19 survivors to infected people, did not significan­tly improve patients’ health status or reduce their risk of dying from the disease any better than a placebo, the study published in the New England Journal of Medicine found, Reuters reported.

Despite limited evidence of its efficacy, convalesce­nt plasma, which

US President Donald Trump touted in August as a “historic breakthrou­gh,” has been frequently given to patients in the United States.

In October, a small study from India suggested convalesce­nt plasma improved symptoms in COVID-19 patients, such as shortness of breath and fatigue, but did not reduce the risk of death or progressio­n to severe disease after 28 days.

The new Argentine study involved 333 hospitaliz­ed patients with severe COVID-19 pneumonia who were randomly assigned to receive convalesce­nt plasma or a placebo.

After 30 days, researcher­s found no significan­t difference­s in patients’ symptoms or health. The mortality rate was nearly the same at 11% in the convalesce­nt plasma group and 11.4% in the placebo group, a difference not deemed statistica­lly significan­t.

It is still possible that convalesce­nt plasma might help less-sick COVID-19 patients, study leader Dr. Ventura Simonovich of the Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires said, but more studies would be needed and supplies of the treatment are not scalable.

For patients with severe disease, like the ones in this study, “other therapies based on antibodies could have a role,” he said.

 ?? Pharmalive.com ??
Pharmalive.com

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