Researchers at Johns Hopkins University now have federal approval to test if blood plasma from recovered COVID-19 patients can help protect the heroes on the front line of the battle against the coronavirus.
The hope is that transfusions of blood plasma
would boost the immune systems of health care providers, first
responders and others at high risk of exposure, the researchers said.
COVID-19 survivors carry antibodies generated to fight the disease
and the plasma is the part of blood that contains those antibodies.
“The ability to carry out a prophylaxis trial will tell us whether
plasma is effective in protecting our health care workers and first
responders from COVID-19,” said Arturo Casadevall, a Johns Hopkins
infectious disease expert, in a statement.
The plasma transfusions are a common treatment for patients suffering
severe bleeding; and scientists hope the same treatment can be used as
both a preventative therapy and to help boost the immune systems of
those already sick.
The US Food and Drug Administration issued Johns Hopkins approved for a clinical trial Friday.
Casadevall has amassed a team of physicians and scientists from
around the country who are now establishing a network of hospitals and
blood banks that can collect, isolate and process blood plasma from
COVID-19 survivors, according to Johns Hopkins.
https://nypost.com/2020/04/03/blood-plasma-of-coronavirus-survivors-may-protect-health-care-workers/
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