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Business News/ Science / Health/  Plasma therapy may be safe, effective in children with COVID-19: Study
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Plasma therapy may be safe, effective in children with COVID-19: Study

Some children who contract this virus can develop very serious complications, so even with limited data in adults, we believed it was worth exploring the use of convalescent plasma as a possible treatment option, says David Teachey, senior author of the study

Photo: ReutersPremium
Photo: Reuters

WASHINGTON : Convalescent plasma therapy appears to be a safe and possibly effective treatment for children with life-threatening cases of COVID-19, according to a small study.

The research, published in the journal Pediatric Blood and Cancer, is the first report of convalescent plasma in children with life-threatening COVID-19.

Researchers from Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) in the US noted that no therapies have been yet proven safe and effective for children who develop life-threatening complications from contracting the SARS-COV-2 virus.

One possible treatment that has been explored in adults is the use of convalescent plasma, which is derived from patients who have recovered from COVID-19, they said.

The therapy can be administered in currently ill patients to generate an antibody response that renders the virus inert, according to the researchers.

Early positive results were observed in adults who received convalescent plasma, but the treatment had not been studied in children, they said.

"Some children who contract this virus can develop very serious complications, so even with limited data in adults, we believed it was worth exploring the use of convalescent plasma as a possible treatment option," said David Teachey, senior author of the study, from CHOP.

The study involved four patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome.

The researchers measured donor antibody levels and recipient antibody response prior to and following the convalescent plasma infusion to determine whether there were any adverse reactions.

In the four patients that were studied, the use of convalescent plasma was not associated with antibody-dependent enhancement, in which antibodies developed during a previous infection cause a worsened response with subsequent infections, a concern that has been described in preclinical models of other coronaviruses.

Convalescent plasma also did not suppress endogenous antibody response, the researchers said.

"We believe that convalescent plasma may provide the greatest benefit for patients who are early into their illness and have not yet generated endogenous antibodies," Teachey said.

"While the small sample size of our study does not allow us to draw any definitive conclusions, we believe this method is safe and future research should include randomised controlled trials to more definitively examine how effective convalescent plasma may be in treating children infected with COVID-19," he added.

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Published: 09 Sep 2020, 01:21 PM IST
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