Convalescent Plasma to Limit Coronavirus Associated Complications: A Proof of Concept Phase-2 Clinical Study at a designated COVID-19 hospital in Mumbai city

Behram Pardiwalla (1) , Ajaykumar Yadav (2) , Ashima Bhatia (3) , Kedar Toraskar (4) , Vijay Sharma (5) , Manishkumar Shah (6) , Ranjeet Gutte (7) , Dhananjay Kumbhar (8) , Dhaval Gohel (9) , Preeti Narayan (10) , Honey Savla (11) , Nimitt Nagda (12) , A. Bopardikar (13)
(1) , India
(2) , India
(3) , India
(4) , India
(5) Wockhardt's Hospital, near Police Station, 1877, Doctor Anandrao Nair Marg, Near Agripada, Mumbai Central, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India - 400011 , India
(6) Wockhardt's Hospital, near Police Station, 1877, Doctor Anandrao Nair Marg, Near Agripada, Mumbai Central, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India - 400011 , India
(7) Wockhardt Ltd., Wockhardt Towers, Bandra Kurla Complex, G Block BKC, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra East, Mumbai, , India
(8) Wockhardt Ltd., Wockhardt Towers, Bandra Kurla Complex, G Block BKC, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra East, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India - 400051 , India
(9) Wockhardt Ltd., Wockhardt Towers, Bandra Kurla Complex, G Block BKC, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra East, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India - 400051 , India
(10) Wockhardt Ltd., Wockhardt Towers, Bandra Kurla Complex, G Block BKC, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra East, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India - 400051 , India
(11) Wockhardt Ltd., Wockhardt Towers, Bandra Kurla Complex, G Block BKC, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra East, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India - 400051 , India
(12) Wockhardt Ltd., Wockhardt Towers, Bandra Kurla Complex, G Block BKC, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra East, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India - 400051 , India
(13) Mahatma Gandhi Hospital Blood Bank, 2nd Floor, Mahatma Gandhi Sevamandir, Swami Vivekananda road, opposite Bandra Lake, Bandra West, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India - 400050 , India

Abstract

Objective: With few treatment options available to manage coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), health systems devised strategies to manage covid-19 using repurposed drugs and revisiting older strategies, such as convalescent plasma. This study was planned to evaluate safety and efficacy of Anti-SARS-CoV-2 convalescent plasma in hospitalized subjects with COVID-19.


Method: An open label, single centre, two arm, prospective, randomised, controlled exploratory phase 2 study was conducted at a covid-19 designated center. 20 subjects (≥18 years) were admitted to hospital (screened 15 June to 27 July 2020) with confirmed moderate covid-19 (partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood/ fraction of inspired oxygen (PaO2/FiO2) ratio between 200 mm Hg and 300 mm Hg or a respiratory rate of more than 24/min with oxygen saturation 93% or less on room air): 10 subjects were assigned to convalescent plasma with standard treatment (test arm) and 10 subjects to standard treatment only (control arm). Subjects in the test arm received either single or two doses of convalescent plasma 24 hours apart based on their clinical condition as per investigator’s discretion.


Results: Subjects in test arm showed earlier resolution of symptoms of fever, shortness of breath and cough and the mean duration for RT-PCR test turning negative was better in the test arm. One subject in the control arm progressed to severe ARDS, while none in test arm progressed to severe ARDS. There was no difference in the use of respiratory support (invasive and non-invasive ventilation) between the 2 arms. There was no mortality observed in the study and no serious adverse reaction observed with the transfusion of convalescent plasma in the study.


Conclusion: This was an exploratory proof of concept study to explore the effectiveness of convalescent plasma in COVID-19 subjects and sample size was not large enough to detect a statistically significant difference however subjects in test arm of this study showed better outcomes in few of the efficacy parameters as compared to subjects in control arm. The use of convalescent plasma transfusion was also observed to be safe.

Full text article

Generated from XML file

References

[1] Patel AK, Patel KK, Patel KR, Shah S, Dileep P. Time trends in the epidemiology of microbial infections at a tertiary care center in west India over last 5 years. J Assoc Physicians India 2010; 58 (Suppl): 37-40
[2] Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India. COVID-19 India dashboard. Retrieved from, https://www.mohfw.gov.in.
[3] Casadevall A, Scharff MD. Return to the past: the case for antibody-based therapies in infectious diseases. Clinical infectious diseases. 1995;21(1):150–161.
[4] Casadevall A, Dadachova E, Pirofski L. Passive antibody therapy for infectious diseases. Nature Reviews Microbiology. 2004;2(9):695–703.
[5] Zhang J-S, Chen J-T, Liu Y-X, Zhang Z-S, Gao H, Liu Y, et al. A serological survey on neutralizing antibody titer of SARS convalescent sera. Journal of medical virology. 2005;77(2):147–150.
[6] Sahr F, Ansumana R, Massaquoi T, Idriss B, Sesay F, Lamin J, et al. Evaluation of convalescent whole blood for treating Ebola Virus Disease in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Journal of Infection. 2017;74(3):302–309.
[7] Casadevall A, Joyner MJ, Pirofski LA. SARS-CoV-2 viral load and antibody responses: the case for convalescent plasma therapy. J Clin Invest 2020;130:5112-4.doi:10.1172/JCI139760.
[8] Shen C, Wang Z, Zhao F, et al. Treatment of 5 Critically Ill Patients With COVID-19 With Convalescent Plasma. JAMA 2020;323:1582-9. doi:10.1001/jama.2020.4783.
[9] Abolghasemi H, Eshghi P, Cheraghali AM, et al. Clinical efficacy of convalescent plasma for treatment of COVID-19 infections: Results of a multicenter clinical study. Transfus Apher Sci 2020;102875.doi:10.1016/j.transci.2020.102875.
[10] Hegerova L, Gooley TA, Sweerus KA, et al. Use of convalescent plasma in hospitalized patients with COVID-19: case series. Blood 2020;136:759-62. doi:10.1182/blood.2020006964.
[11] Xia X, Li K, Wu L, et al. Improved clinical symptoms and mortality among patients with severe or critical COVID-19 after convalescent plasma transfusion. Blood 2020;136:755-9. doi:10.1182/blood.2020007079
[12] Joyner MJ, Bruno KA, Klassen SA, et al. Safety Update: COVID-19 Convalescent Plasma in 20 000 Hospitalized Patients. Mayo Clin Proc 2020 Jul 19; www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7368917/Accessed on 25 Aug 2020.
[13] Agarwal A, Mukherjee A, Kumar G, et al. Convalescent plasma in the management of moderate covid-19 in adults in India: open label phase II multicentre randomised controlled trial (PLACID Trial). BMJ 2020; 371:m3939.

Authors

Behram Pardiwalla
Ajaykumar Yadav
Ashima Bhatia
Kedar Toraskar
Vijay Sharma
Manishkumar Shah
Ranjeet Gutte
Dhananjay Kumbhar
Dhaval Gohel
Preeti Narayan
Honey Savla
Nimitt Nagda
A. Bopardikar
Pardiwalla, B., Yadav, A., Bhatia, A., Toraskar, K., Sharma, V. ., Shah, M. ., Gutte, R. ., Kumbhar, D. ., Gohel, D. ., Narayan, P. ., Savla, H. ., Nagda, N. ., & Bopardikar, A. . (2021). Convalescent Plasma to Limit Coronavirus Associated Complications: A Proof of Concept Phase-2 Clinical Study at a designated COVID-19 hospital in Mumbai city. Journal of Current Medical Research and Opinion, 4(05), 940–949. https://doi.org/10.15520/jcmro.v4i05.419
Copyright and license info is not available

Article Details