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Convalescent plasma treatment of severe COVID-19: a propensity score-matched control study.

Sean T H LiuHung-Mo LinIan BaineAnia WajnbergJeffrey P GumprechtFarah RahmanDenise RodriguezPranai TandonAdel Bassily-MarcusJeffrey BanderCharles SankyAmy DupperAllen ZhengFreddy T NguyenFatima AmanatDaniel StadlbauerDeena R AltmanBenjamin K ChenFlorian KrammerDamodara Rao MenduAdolfo Firpo-BetancourtMatthew A LevinEmilia BagiellaArturo CasadevallCarlos Cordon-CardoJeffrey S JhangSuzanne A ArinsburgDavid L ReichJudith A AbergNicole M Bouvier
Published in: Nature medicine (2020)
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), is a new human disease with few effective treatments1. Convalescent plasma, donated by persons who have recovered from COVID-19, is the acellular component of blood that contains antibodies, including those that specifically recognize SARS-CoV-2. These antibodies, when transfused into patients infected with SARS-CoV-2, are thought to exert an antiviral effect, suppressing virus replication before patients have mounted their own humoral immune responses2,3. Virus-specific antibodies from recovered persons are often the first available therapy for an emerging infectious disease, a stopgap treatment while new antivirals and vaccines are being developed1,2. This retrospective, propensity score-matched case-control study assessed the effectiveness of convalescent plasma therapy in 39 patients with severe or life-threatening COVID-19 at The Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City. Oxygen requirements on day 14 after transfusion worsened in 17.9% of plasma recipients versus 28.2% of propensity score-matched controls who were hospitalized with COVID-19 (adjusted odds ratio (OR), 0.86; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.75-0.98; chi-square test P value = 0.025). Survival also improved in plasma recipients (adjusted hazard ratio (HR), 0.34; 95% CI, 0.13-0.89; chi-square test P = 0.027). Convalescent plasma is potentially effective against COVID-19, but adequately powered, randomized controlled trials are needed.
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