Frontiers in Medicine (Jan 2022)

The Role of Disease Severity and Demographics in the Clinical Course of COVID-19 Patients Treated With Convalescent Plasma

  • Tengfei Ma,
  • Chad C. Wiggins,
  • Breanna M. Kornatowski,
  • Ra'ed S. Hailat,
  • Andrew J. Clayburn,
  • Winston L. Guo,
  • Patrick W. Johnson,
  • Jonathon W. Senefeld,
  • Stephen A. Klassen,
  • Sarah E. Baker,
  • Katelyn A. Bruno,
  • DeLisa Fairweather,
  • R. Scott Wright,
  • Rickey E. Carter,
  • Chenxi Li,
  • Michael J. Joyner,
  • Nigel S. Paneth,
  • Nigel S. Paneth

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2021.707895
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Treatment of patients with COVID-19 using convalescent plasma from recently recovered patients has been shown to be safe, but the time course of change in clinical status following plasma transfusion in relation to baseline disease severity has not yet been described. We analyzed short, descriptive daily reports of patient status in 7,180 hospitalized recipients of COVID-19 convalescent plasma in the Mayo Clinic Expanded Access Program. We assessed, from the day following transfusion, whether the patient was categorized by his or her physician as better, worse or unchanged compared to the day before, and whether, on the reporting day, the patient received mechanical ventilation, was in the ICU, had died or had been discharged. Most patients improved following transfusion, but clinical improvement was most notable in mild to moderately ill patients. Patients classified as severely ill upon enrollment improved, but not as rapidly, while patients classified as critically ill/end-stage and patients on ventilators showed worsening of disease status even after treatment with convalescent plasma. Patients age 80 and over showed little or no clinical improvement following transfusion. Clinical status at the time of convalescent plasma treatment and age appear to be the primary factors in determining the therapeutic effectiveness of COVID-19 convalescent plasma among hospitalized patients.

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