The Sun (Malaysia)

Plasma from survivors not much help: Study

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BUENOS AIRES: 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 on Tuesday from a clinical trial in Argentina.

The therapy known 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.

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 hospitalis­ed 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. – Reuters

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