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Efficacy of Convalescent Plasma Therapy compared to Fresh Frozen Plasma in Severely ill COVID-19 Patients: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
Meenu Bajpai; Suresh kumar; Ashish Maheshwari; Karan Chabra; Pratibha Kale; Amita Gupta; ashad Narayanan; Ekta Gupta; Nirupama Ttrehanpati; Chhagan Bihari; Reshu Agarwal; Kamini Gupta; Upendra kumar Gupta; Ankit Bhardwaj; Guresh Kumar; Mojahidul Islam; Ravinder Singh; Pushpa Yadav; RAKHI MAIWALL; Shiv K Sarin.
Affiliation
  • Meenu Bajpai; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Suresh kumar; Maulana Azad Medical College
  • Ashish Maheshwari; Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences
  • Karan Chabra; Maulana Azad Medical College
  • Pratibha Kale; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Amita Gupta; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • ashad Narayanan; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Ekta Gupta; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Nirupama Ttrehanpati; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Chhagan Bihari; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Reshu Agarwal; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Kamini Gupta; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Upendra kumar Gupta; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Ankit Bhardwaj; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Guresh Kumar; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Mojahidul Islam; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Ravinder Singh; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Pushpa Yadav; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • RAKHI MAIWALL; INSTITUTE OF LIVER AND BILIARY SCIENCES
  • Shiv K Sarin; Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences (ILBS)
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-20219337
ABSTRACT
BackgroundThe role of convalescent plasma (COPLA) for the treatment of severely ill Corona Virus Disease-2019 is under investigation. We compared the efficacy and safety of convalescent plasma with fresh frozen plasma (FFP) in severe COVID-19 patients. Methods and findingsThis was an open-label, single-centre phase II RCT on 29 patients with severe COVID-19 from India. One group received COPLA with standard medical care (SMC) (n=14), and another group received FFP with SMC (n=15). A total of 29 patients were randomized in the two treatment groups. Eleven out of 14 (78.5%) patients remained free of ventilation at day seven in the intervention arm while the proportion was 14 out of 15 (93.3 %) in the control arm (p= 0.258). The median reductions in RR per min at 48-hours in COPLA-group and FFP group were -6.5 and -3 respectively [p=0.004] and at day seven were -14.5 and -10 respectively (p=0.008). The median improvements in percentage O2 saturation at 48-hours were 6.5 and 2 respectively [p=0.001] and at day seven were 10 and 7.5 respectively (p=0.026). In the COPLA-group, the median improvement in PaO2/FiO2 was significantly superior to FFP at 48-hours [41.94 and 231.15, p=0.009], and also at day-7 [5.55 and 77.01 p<0.001]. We did not find significant differences in hospitalization duration between the groups (0.08). ConclusionCOPLA therapy resulted in rapid improvement in respiratory parameters and shortened time to clinical recovery, although no significant reduction in mortality was observed in this pilot trial. We need larger trials to draw conclusive evidence on the use of Convalescent plasma in COVID-19. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrial.gov (identifier NCT04346446).
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Full text: Available Collection: Preprints Database: medRxiv Type of study: Experimental_studies / Prognostic study / Rct Language: English Year: 2020 Document type: Preprint
Full text: Available Collection: Preprints Database: medRxiv Type of study: Experimental_studies / Prognostic study / Rct Language: English Year: 2020 Document type: Preprint
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