Life (Mar 2022)

Convalescent Plasma for Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients: A Single-Center Experience

  • Massimo Franchini,
  • Claudia Glingani,
  • Giuseppe De Donno,
  • Giuseppe Lucchini,
  • Massimiliano Beccaria,
  • Massimo Amato,
  • Gian Paolo Castelli,
  • Leonardo Bianciardi,
  • Mauro Pagani,
  • Marco Ghirardini,
  • Giuseppe Puma,
  • Barbara Presciuttini,
  • Maria Teresa Costantino,
  • Marilena Frigato,
  • Verena Crosato,
  • Giorgio Tiecco,
  • Alice Mulè,
  • Dorothea Angela Papalia,
  • Francesco Inglese,
  • Fabio Spreafico,
  • Martina Garuti,
  • Antonietta Pecoriello,
  • Giulia Cervi,
  • Graziana Greco,
  • Vanni Galavotti,
  • Tiziana Santini,
  • Angela Berselli,
  • Carlo Montalto,
  • Riccardo Bertoletti,
  • Simona Aurelia Bellometti,
  • Enrico Capuzzo,
  • Dario Benazzi,
  • Gianpaolo Grisolia,
  • Fabio Pajola,
  • Raffaello Stradoni,
  • Matteo Zani,
  • Adriano Verzola,
  • Vito Codeluppi,
  • Silvia Vesentini,
  • Elisa Bellocchio,
  • Marco Candini,
  • Giorgina Ambrosi,
  • Francesca Carandina,
  • Cleante Scarduelli,
  • Albino Reggiani,
  • Salvatore Casari,
  • on behalf of Convalescent Plasma Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/life12030420
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. 420

Abstract

Read online

In Winter 2020, Italy, and in particular the Lombardy region, was the first country in the Western hemisphere to be hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. Plasma from individuals recovered from COVID-19 (COVID-19 convalescent plasma, CCP) was the first therapeutic tool adopted to counteract the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2). In this retrospective cohort study, we report the experience of the city hospital of Mantua, Lombardy region, on the compassionate use of CCP in patients hospitalized for severe COVID-19. Between April 2020 and April 2021, 405 consecutive COVID-19 patients received 657 CCP units with a median anti-SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibody (nAb) titer of 160 (interquartile range (IQR), 80–320). Their median age was 68 years (IQR, 56–78 years), and 62% were males. At enrollment, 55% of patients had an increased body mass index (BMI), and 25.6% had at least three comorbidities. The 28-day crude mortality rate was 12.6% (51/405). Young age (<68 years), mild disease (admission to low-intensity departments) and early treatment (<7 days from symptoms onset) with high nAb titer (≥320) CCP were found as independently associated with a favorable response to CCP treatment. No safety concerns were recorded, with a rate of CCP-related adverse reactions (all of mild intensity) of 1.3%. In our real-life experience, the first in the western world, early administration of high-titer CCP was a safe and effective treatment for hospitalized COVID-19 patients.

Keywords