JCI Insight (May 2023)

COVID-19 convalescent plasma boosts early antibody titer and does not influence the adaptive immune response

  • John F. McDyer,
  • Mahzad Azimpouran,
  • Valerie L. Durkalski-Mauldin,
  • Robert G. Clevenger,
  • Sharon D. Yeatts,
  • Xutao Deng,
  • William Barsan,
  • Robert Silbergleit,
  • Nahed El Kassar,
  • Iulia Popescu,
  • Dimiter Dimitrov,
  • Wei Li,
  • Emily J. Lyons,
  • Sophia C. Lieber,
  • Mars Stone,
  • Frederick K. Korley,
  • Clifton W. Callaway,
  • Larry J. Dumont,
  • Philip J. Norris,
  • for the SIREN-C3PO Investigators

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 8

Abstract

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Multiple randomized, controlled clinical trials have yielded discordant results regarding the efficacy of convalescent plasma in outpatients, with some showing an approximately 2-fold reduction in risk and others showing no effect. We quantified binding and neutralizing antibody levels in 492 of the 511 participants from the Clinical Trial of COVID-19 Convalescent Plasma in Outpatients (C3PO) of a single unit of COVID-19 convalescent plasma (CCP) versus saline infusion. In a subset of 70 participants, peripheral blood mononuclear cells were obtained to define the evolution of B and T cell responses through day 30. Binding and neutralizing antibody responses were approximately 2-fold higher 1 hour after infusion in recipients of CCP compared with saline plus multivitamin, but levels achieved by the native immune system by day 15 were almost 10-fold higher than those seen immediately after CCP administration. Infusion of CCP did not block generation of the host antibody response or skew B or T cell phenotype or maturation. Activated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells were associated with more severe disease outcome. These data show that CCP leads to a measurable boost in anti–SARS-CoV-2 antibodies but that the boost is modest and may not be sufficient to alter disease course.

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