A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Individual patient and donor seroprofiles in convalescent plasma treatment of COVID-19 in REMAP-CAP clinical trial




AuthorsNurmi, Visa; Mayne, Richard; Knight, Chanice; Almonacid-Mendoza, Hannia L.; Secret, Shannah; Estcourt, Lise; Hepojoki, Jussi; Sustic, Tonci; Lamikanra, Abigail A.; Tsang, Hoi Pat; Menon, David K.; Shankar-Hari, Manu; van der Schoot, C. Ellen; Vidarsson, Gestur; Roberts, David J.; Simmonds, Peter; Hedman, Klaus; Harvala, Heli

PublisherW B SAUNDERS CO LTD

Publishing placeLONDON

Publication year2025

JournalJournal of Infection

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF INFECTION

Journal acronymJ INFECTION

Article number106412

Volume90

Issue2

Number of pages10

ISSN0163-4453

eISSN1532-2742

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinf.2025.106412(external)

Web address https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinf.2025.106412(external)

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/484985436(external)


Abstract

Objectives: Convalescent plasma (CP) treatment of COVID-19 has shown significant therapeutic effect only when administered early. We investigated the importance of patient and CP seroprofiles on treatment outcome in REMAP-CAP CP trial.

Methods: We evaluated neutralising antibodies (nAb), anti-spike (S) IgM, IgG, IgG avidity, IgG fucosylation and respiratory viral loads in a sub-set of patients (n=80) and controls (n=51) before and after transfusion, comparing them to those in the CP units (n=157) they received.

Results: Most patients were SARS-CoV-2 seropositive pre-transfusion (72% nAb; 89% S-IgG seropositivity). The majority (80%) had higher pre-transfusion S-IgG levels (median 1.7×106 arbitrary units (AU); 56%) or S-IgG production rates (median 1.1×106 AU/day; 64%) than they received from CP (median 2.2×105 AU). Only 22% of the patients demonstrated significant (median 24-fold) increase in their S-IgG levels acquired from transfusion. Better outcomes, measured by organ support-free days, were associated with increase in S-IgM levels (p=0.007), decreased S-IgG fucosylation (p<0.001), lower patient age (p<0.001) but not with receiving CP (p=0.337).

Conclusions: Based on our data, increased S-antibody levels linked to transfused CP were only observed in pre-seroconversion or immunodeficient patients lacking their own SARS-CoV-2 antibodies, representing the groups where CP treatment has previously shown most benefit.


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Funding information in the publication
This work was supported by SUPPORT-E Project (HH, DJR, LE); National Institute for Heath and Care Research, COVID-19-RECPLAS (DJR, LE); Research Council of Finland (JH); Finnish Society for Study of Infectious Diseases (VN); Finnish Foundation for Research on Viral Diseases (VN); NHS Blood and Transplant (HH, DJR, LE, AAL, HPT); Sigrid Jusélius Foundation (VN, KH); Magnus Ehrnrooth Foundation (VN, KH); Societatis Medicorum Fennicae - The Medical Society of Finland (VN, KH).


Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 13:16