Efficacy and Safety of COVID-19 Convalescent Plasma in Hospitalized Patients A Randomized Clinical Trial

Mila B Ortigoza,Hyunah Yoon,Keith S Goldfeld,Andrea B Troxel,Johanna P Daily,Yinxiang Wu,Yi Li,Danni Wu,Gia F Cobb, Gillian Baptiste,Mary O'Keeffe,Marilou O Corpuz,Luis Ostrosky-Zeichner, Amee Amin,Ioannis M Zacharioudakis,Dushyantha T Jayaweera,Yanyun Wu,Julie V Philley, Megan S Devine,Mahalia S Desruisseaux,Alessandro D Santin,Shweta Anjan,Reeba Mathew,Bela Patel,Masayuki Nigo,Rabi Upadhyay,Tania Kupferman,Andrew N Dentino,Rahul Nanchal,Christian A Merlo,David N Hager,Kartik Chandran,Jonathan R Lai,Johanna Rivera,Chowdhury R Bikash,Gorka Lasso, Timothy P Hilbert,Monika Paroder, Andrea A Asencio,Mengling Liu,Eva Petkova, Alexander Bragat,Reza Shaker,David D McPherson,Ralph L Sacco,Marla J Keller,Corita R Grudzen,Judith S Hochman,Liise-Anne Pirofski,Lalitha Parameswaran, Anthony T Corcoran, Abhinav Rohatgi,Marta W Wronska,Xinyuan Wu,Ranjini Srinivasan,Fang-Ming Deng,Thomas D Filardo,Jay Pendse, Simone B Blaser, Olga Whyte, Jacqueline M Gallagher,Ololade E Thomas, Danibel Ramos, Caroline L Sturm-Reganato, Charlotte C Fong,Ivy M Daus,Arianne Gisselle Payoen, Joseph T Chiofolo, Mark T Friedman,Ding Wen Wu,Jessica L Jacobson, Jeffrey G Schneider,Uzma N Sarwar,Henry E Wang,Ryan M Huebinger, Goutham Dronavalli,Yu Bai, Carolyn Z Grimes,Karen W Eldin, Virginia E Umana, Jessica G Martin, Timothy R Heath,Fatimah O Bello,Daru Lane Ransford,Maudry Laurent-Rolle,Sheela V Shenoi, Oscar Bate Akide-Ndunge,Bipin Thapa,Jennifer L Peterson, Kelly Knauf,Shivani U Patel,Laura L Cheney,Christopher A Tormey,Jeanne E Hendrickson

JAMA INTERNAL MEDICINE(2022)

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摘要
IMPORTANCE There is clinical equipoise for COVID-19 convalescent plasma (CCP) use in patients hospitalized with COVID-19. OBJECTIVE To determine the safety and efficacy of CCP compared with placebo in hospitalized patients with COVID-19 receiving noninvasive supplemental oxygen. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS CONTAIN COVID-19, a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of CCP in hospitalized adults with COVID-19, was conducted at 21 US hospitals from April 17, 2020, to March 15, 2021. The trial enrolled 941 participants who were hospitalized for 3 or less days or presented 7 or less days after symptom onset and required noninvasive oxygen supplementation. INTERVENTIONS A unit of approximately 250 mL of CCP or equivalent volume of placebo (normal saline). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary outcome was participant scores on the 11-point World Health Organization (WHO) Ordinal Scale for Clinical Improvement on day 14 after randomization; the secondary outcome was WHO scores determined on day 28. Subgroups were analyzed with respect to age, baseline WHO score, concomitant medications, symptom duration, CCP SARS-CoV-2 titer, baseline SARS-CoV-2 serostatus, and enrollment quarter. Outcomes were analyzed using a bayesian proportional cumulative odds model. Efficacy of CCP was defined as a cumulative adjusted odds ratio (cOR) less than 1 and a clinically meaningful effect as cOR less than 0.8. RESULTS Of 941 participants randomized (473 to placebo and 468 to CCP), 556 were men (59.1%); median age was 63 years (IQR, 52-73); 373 (39.6%) were Hispanic and 132 (14.0%) were non-Hispanic Black. The cOR for the primary outcome adjusted for site, baseline risk, WHO score, age, sex, and symptom duration was 0.94 (95% credible interval [CrI], 0.75-1.18) with posterior probability (P[cOR<1] = 72%); the cOR for the secondary adjusted outcome was 0.92 (95% CrI, 0.74-1.16; P[cOR<1] = 76%). Exploratory subgroup analyses suggested heterogeneity of treatment effect: at day 28, cORs were 0.72 (95% CrI, 0.46-1.13; P[cOR<1] = 93%) for participants enrolled in April-June 2020 and 0.65 (95% CrI, 0.41 to 1.02; P[cOR<1] = 97%) for those not receiving remdesivir and not receiving corticosteroids at randomization. Median CCP SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing titer used in April to June 2020 was 1:175 (IQR, 76-379). Any adverse events (excluding transfusion reactions) were reported for 39 (8.2%) placebo recipients and 44 (9.4%) CCP recipients (P = .57). Transfusion reactions occurred in 2 (0.4) placebo recipients and 8 (1.7) CCP recipients (P = .06). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this trial, CCP did not meet the prespecified primary and secondary outcomes for CCP efficacy. However, high-titer CCP may have benefited participants early in the pandemic when remdesivir and corticosteroids were not in use. QUESTION Does COVID-19 convalescent plasma (CCP), compared with placebo, improve the clinical status of hospitalized patients with COVID-19 requiring noninvasive supplemental oxygen? FINDINGS In this randomized clinical trial including 941 patients, based on the World Health Organization 11-point Ordinal Scale for Clinical Improvement, CCP did not benefit 468 participants randomized to CCP compared with 473 randomized to placebo from April 2020 to March 2021. However, in exploratory analyses, CCP appeared to benefit those enrolled from April to June 2020, the period when most participants received high-titer CCP and were not receiving remdesivir and corticosteroids at randomization. MEANING In this trial, CCP did not meet prespecified outcomes for efficacy, but high-titer CCP may have benefited hospitalized patients with COVID-19 early in the pandemic when other treatments were not in use, suggesting a heterogenous treatment effect over time. This randomized clinical trial examines the use of convalescent plasma from patients with COVID-19 in hospitalized patients with COVID-19 who are not receiving invasive oxygenation treatment.
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hospitalized patients,plasma
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