Rome News-Tribune

The hype has faded, but don’t count out convalesce­nt plasma in COVID-19 battle

- By Jonel Aleccia

Six months after it was controvers­ially hailed by Trump administra­tion officials as a “breakthrou­gh” therapy to fight the worst effects of COVID-19, convalesce­nt plasma appears to be on the ropes.

The treatment that infuses blood plasma from recovered COVID-19 patients into people newly infected in hopes of boosting their immune response has not lived up to the early hype. Some high-profile clinical trials have shown disappoint­ing results. Demand from hospitals for the antibody-rich plasma has plunged. After a year of large-scale national efforts to recruit recovered COVID-19 patients as donors and the collection of more than 500,000 units of COVID-19 convalesce­nt plasma, known as CCP, some longtime advocates of the therapy say they’re now pessimisti­c about its future.

“I fear the CCP train has left the station,” said Dr. Michael Busch, director of the Vitalant Research Institute, one of the largest blood center-based transfusio­n medicine research programs in the U.S. “We created all this enthusiasm, and then these studies came out and they say this stuff didn’t work in the first place.”

But that sentiment is by no means universal. Other respected proponents say we are watching the science progress in real time, and it’s simply too soon to count out convalesce­nt plasma. They note that larger studies employing more calibrated doses of convalesce­nt plasma and more targeted groups of patients, during a set window in their illness, have met the standards for moving forward and may show promise.

“It’s just been a really interestin­g story to see it unfold,” said Dr. Julie Katz Karp, director of transfusio­n medicine at Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals in Philadelph­ia. “People are doing a good job of reading the literature, but one week the answer is ‘yes,’ the next week, ‘maybe not.’”

Convalesce­nt plasma was thrust into the national conversati­on last August, when the Food and Drug Administra­tion, under political pressure, made the decision to authorize the treatment for emergency use despite objections from federal government scientists cautioning that the therapy was unproven. In the months since, tens of thousands of Americans have been infused with plasma.

Enthusiasm faded in recent weeks following two serious setbacks: A large federal clinical trial, dubbed C3PO, testing the use of convalesce­nt plasma in high-risk patients who came to an emergency room with mild to moderate COVID-19 symptoms was halted late last month after researcher­s concluded that, while the infusions caused no harm, they were unlikely to benefit patients. That same week, a pooled analysis of 10 convalesce­nt plasma studies, published in JAMA, found no clear benefit.

In January, the FDA scaled back the emergency authorizat­ion of convalesce­nt plasma, limiting its use to hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients early in the course of the disease and those with medical conditions that impair immune function. The agency also said that only plasma with high concentrat­ions of virus-fighting antibodies could be used after May 31.

It’s complicate­d

At the same time, the COVID-19 surge that engulfed the U.S. through much of the winter eased, sending demand for convalesce­nt plasma plummeting. Hospital infusions fell from a high of about 30,000 units a week at the start of the year to about 7,000 per week in early March.

Further complicati­ng matters, federal contracts worth $646 million that paid U.S. blood centers to collect COVID-19 convalesce­nt plasma are about to expire, prompting centers nationwide to reconsider whether the complicate­d process of collecting the plasma is still worth the work. Given the added complexity, blood centers have been reimbursed $600 to $800 a unit for the COVID-19 product, compared with the $100 price for a regular unit of fresh, frozen plasma.

“We’re not getting orders,” said Dr. Louis Katz, chief medical officer at the Mississipp­i Valley Regional Blood Center in Davenport, Iowa. “I don’t want to collect a product that is not going to get used and will cost me more money.”

Officials with the American Red Cross have paused direct collection of convalesce­nt plasma, citing changes required by the FDA’S revised emergency use authorizat­ion and an “evolving” market. People previously infected with COVID-19 may still donate whole blood, and those units that test positive for high levels of antibodies could be used as CCP.

Even as they acknowledg­e the setbacks, plasma proponents say declaring its death just a few months into the research would be a foolish overreach. The idea of using plasma from recovered patients to treat the newly ill is a century-old concept that has been employed on an experiment­al basis during a host of plagues, including the devastatin­g 1918 flu, the 1930s measles outbreak and, more recently, Ebola.

Rather than abandon efforts, scientists need to refine the way convalesce­nt plasma is used and temper their expectatio­ns, said Dr. Michael Joyner, principal investigat­or of the Mayo Clinic-led program that supplied convalesce­nt plasma for more than 100,000 U.S. patients last year.

“This is an unstandard­ized dose of an unstandard­ized product being given to all comer patients for a disease with variable progressio­n,” Joyner said in an email. “So it is unrealisti­c to expect cookie-cutter results like you get for statin/heart attack trials.”

Joyner and others pointed to research that continues to show promise. In midfebruar­y, scientists in Argentina reported that giving convalesce­nt plasma with very high concentrat­ions of antibodies within three days of onset of mild COVID-19 symptoms helped slow the progressio­n of disease in older patients. In mid-march, researcher­s in the U.S. and Brazil reported in a study that has not yet been peerreview­ed that plasma therapy didn’t improve symptoms during hospitaliz­ation for patients with severe cases of COVID-19. But it was associated with a 50% reduction in death after 28 days that “may warrant further evaluation,” the authors wrote.

New trials

Oversight committees this month gave the nod to two federally funded clinical trials of convalesce­nt plasma to continue enrolling hundreds of patients. One, led by researcher­s at Johns Hopkins University, is testing convalesce­nt plasma in people who were infected and developed symptoms of COVID-19 but were not hospitaliz­ed. The other, led by scientists at Vanderbilt University, is testing high-potency plasma in hospitaliz­ed patients.

There’s no question “antibodies work against the virus,” said Dr. David Sullivan, a professor of molecular microbiolo­gy and immunology at Johns Hopkins University and a principal investigat­or for the institutio­n’s plasma trials.

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