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Patients who are ill with COVID-19 may benefit from receiving convalescent plasma infusions containing antibodies from donors who have recovered from the disease and are proven to no longer be infected. Given the current public health emergency due to COVID-19, the FDA has recently fast-tracked the use of convalescent plasma. The purpose for this study is to assess if convalescent plasma collected from donors previously infected with Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the virus that causes COVID-19, can provide clinical benefit to those acutely ill with the virus and to evaluate if such treatment is safe.
There will be two arms in the interventional study, where subjects will either be treated with convalescent plasma or fresh frozen plasma in a randomized and blinded manner. As an additional comparison, the clinical course of subjects enrolled during the period of the study who do not receive an alternative treatment for COVID-19 will be assessed.
Full description
Study Design and Procedures - Comparison group (no-treatment control)
Study Design and Procedures - Intervention arms Screening Visit
Study Design and Procedures - Transfusion Visits (Study days 0 and 1) Note - the first transfusion visit may be done on the same day as the screening visit if time permits, otherwise it will be done the following day. Items 1 and 2 will only be performed for the first transfusion visit if the visit occurs the day after the screening visit.
The patient's clinical status, oxygen requirement, vital signs, and physical exam will be extracted from their clinical chart. Extracted information will include:
Participants will be asked a symptom questionnaire.
Randomization to convalescent plasma or fresh frozen plasma will be 1:1. Randomization will be conducted by a physician not involved in the study and using pre-prepared lists with random permuted blocks of varying sizes. This physician will hand-deliver an order sheet for either convalescent or fresh frozen plasma to the blood bank (this way no orders that could potentially unblind study personnel will be in participants' charts).
The blood bank technical staff will select either two compatible blood-type non-therapeutic units of plasma or two compatible units of convalescent plasma, depending on which group the patient has been randomized to.
If the blood bank does not have any product of that patient's blood type, investigators will not be able to have the subject complete the remainder of the study. However, the investigators will keep the information about the participant's blood type in the study database. Then, in the event that plasma of the appropriate blood type is obtained, study investigators may contact participants to find out if they are still interested in being part of the study.
The blood product will be delivered to the floor and the participant's nurse will infuse and document plasma administration following UIC Hospital policy "TX 5.03." Study subjects will receive 1 unit of plasma the first day, with the second unit being given the next day.
Once the blood product has been hung, the patient's nurse will place it in a bag that will prevent the patient or physician's taking care of the patient from seeing whether the unit is regular frozen plasma or convalescent plasma. The nurse will be under instructions not to convey information about which type of plasma was used to the study team.
The nurse will be instructed to stop the transfusion while a small sample of plasma remains in the bag. The bag will then be sent back to the blood bank (this is usual protocol for blood products), and remaining plasma will be emptied into a storage container, labeled with the patient's study identification number, and frozen for later use for research purposes.
If a transfusion reaction occurs the transfusion will be stopped and reported to the blood bank as stated in UIC Hospital policy "TX 5.03."
Study Design and Procedures - Post-infusion monitoring
Post-transfusion clinical data will be collected from electronic medical record daily for days 2-8 following the first transfusion (or until the participant is discharged if they are discharged prior to 8 days following transfusion). This information includes:
The participant will have a swab sample for SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR collected daily for days 2-8 following the first transfusion (or as many days as they are admitted if they are discharged prior to 8 days following the first transfusion) and on day 14 following plasma infusion.
Participants will also have blood drawn on days 2, 4, and 8 following the first plasma infusion for measurement of antibody titers to SARS-CoV-2 (if they are discharged prior to day 4 or 8 they will not undergo that day's blood draw).
If the patient is discharged prior to 14-days following infusion of plasma, they will be asked to return to Project Wish on day 14 post- infusion of plasma for a blood draw (for antibody titers), a nasopharyngeal and/or oropharyngeal swab (for RT-PCR testing) and to answer a short symptom questionnaire.
The patient will be contacted by telephone (if discharged) at 28-days following plasma infusion and will be asked a symptom questionnaire. If they remain in the hospital at this time point, they will be asked this questionnaire (if capable) and will have information regarding their clinical condition extracted from their chart.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Patients with known Immunoglobulin A deficiency (high risk of severe or fatal anaphylactic reactions)
Patients who are on a ventilator
Patients with past history of severe transfusion reaction including transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) or anaphylaxis
Patients with a baseline requirement for supplemental oxygen due to chronic lung disease or with known history of either moderate-to-severe asthma or emphysema.
Female subjects who report that they are pregnant or breastfeeding
Receipt of pooled immunoglobulin in the past 30 days
Patients must be willing to not take any another alternative experimental treatment for COVID-19 from the time they undergo enrollment until the 28-day follow-up phone call
•. Participants who are being treated with Remdesivir and have had their first dose of Remdesivir greater than 24 hours prior to the time they will receive their first dose of convalescent plasma
Patients with severe disease due to COVID-19, as manifested by a need for vasopressors, and/or diagnosis of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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