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December 8, 2021: On Monday, The World Health Organization issued a strong recommendation against administering convalescent plasma to treat Covid-19 patients, citing research that shows no improvement in patients who received the treatment.
In convalescent plasma therapy, blood plasma is donated by someone who has recovered from the virus and transferred into a patient battling the virus. The hope the donor’s antibodies help fight the infection.
However, the WHO’s guideline development group found that “there was no clear benefit for critical outcomes such as mortality and mechanical ventilation for patients with non-severe, severe or critical illness, and significant resource requirements in terms of cost and time for the administration.”
The group said the treatment also faces practical challenges, such as finding and testing donors and collecting, storing, and transporting the plasma.
The recommendation is based on 16 trials with more than 16,000 non-severe, severe and critical Covid infections. The group said research on the treatment should proceed in randomized control trials. The new recommendation is published in the British Medical Journal.
IN FEBRUARY, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration scaled back its convalescent plasma emergency use authorization to cover only hospitalized patients early in disease progression and those hospitalized who have immune system disorders in which they cannot produce a strong antibody response.
“Plasma with low levels of antibodies is not helpful in COVID-19,” the FDA said in its revised emergency authorization in February.
The agency issued its original, broader authorization on an emergency basis in the U.S. for all hospitalized patients in August 2020 when there were no other approved treatments for the virus. During the Trump administration, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar had celebrated the use of convalescent plasma as a “milestone achievement” in the efforts to fight Covid.
Since then, the FDA has authorized two Covid treatments: Gilead’s antiviral drug redeliver in October 2020 and Regeneron’s antibody cocktail the following month. Pfizer’s two-dose vaccine was approved about a year ago.
In August, the National Institutes of Health also said convalescent plasma didn’t help patients in an NIH-backed study of more than 500 adult Covid patients at the University of Pittsburgh. The NIH said that the trial was stopped in February due to its lack of effectiveness.
The New England Journal of Medicine, in a study published last month, found that convalescent plasma did not prevent disease progression in high-risk outpatients when administered one week after symptom onset. According to the survey, it also did not improve clinical outcomes in hospitalized patients late in the course of their illness.
However, the study found that convalescent plasma did reduce disease progression in older, outpatient adults if administered within 72 hours of symptom onset.