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November 23, 2024 8:37 PM

Medical & Pharma

Convalescent Plasma Technology: Can it conquer Corona?

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Plasma Therapy
Read Time: 4 minutes

The whole world is suffering from the decadal deadly COVID-19 virulent attack. There is no respite for the people in spite of all advanced expertise and technology. It seems that the earth’s most advanced species in every walk of life have surrendered and succumbed to the novel virus. Amidst such adversaries a ray of hope seems to be knocking the door of health experts in the name of Convalescent plasma technology and who knows it can be the elixir for all of us.

Recently The Delhi Government makes it official after getting the nod from the ICMR to recommend its doctors for the lethal virus treatment. Not only India but the world’s most advanced and suffered nation USA’s Pharmacy wing The United States’ Food and Drug Administration is also advocating a new coronavirus drug derived from the blood plasma of people who have recovered from Covid-19. Its approach is based on the idea that antibodies developed by recovered patients might strengthen the immune system of new patients.

The idea of using plasma from survivors, also known as convalescent-plasma therapy, dates back to the late 19th century. The treatment was first used in the 1890s and helped stem a number of outbreaks until antimicrobial therapy, which kills or halts the microorganism, was developed in the 1940s.In the early 20th century, convalescent plasma treatment was used during outbreaks of diseases such as measles, mumps, and influenza. More recently, it was used during the H1N1 influenza pandemic, and again in 2013 during the Ebola outbreak in West Africa. In the case of the latter, two patients survived the disease after treatment. Following the Ebola outbreak, the World Health Organization issued guidance for its use in treating the disease, saying the small group it used showed “promising results.”Doctors have transfused the blood of recovered patients into those still sick with the 1918 flu, measles, polio, chickenpox, and SARS —to varying degrees of success.

Patients who have recovered from the disease have permanent antibodies generated by the immune system floating in their blood plasma, the liquid component of blood. To turn that into a drug, the plasma is harvested, tested for safety, and purified to isolate those protective antibodies. When injected into a new patient, the “plasma-derived therapy” — also known as convalescent plasma — provides “passive immunity” until the patient’s immune system can generate its own antibodies.

Despite the potential utility of passive antibody treatments, there have been few concerted efforts to use them as initial therapies against emerging and pandemic infectious threats. The absence of large trials certainly contributes to the hesitancy to employ this treatment. Also, the most effective formulations (convalescent plasma or hyperimmune globulin, H-Ig) are unknown. Convalescent plasma has the advantage that while its antibodies limit viral replication, other plasma components can also exert beneficial effects such as replenishing coagulation factors when given to patients with hemorrhagic fevers such as Ebola. On the other hand, individual convalescent plasma units demonstrate donor-dependent variability in antibody specificities and titers. H-Ig preparations, in contrast, contain standardized antibody doses, although fractionation removes IgM, which may be necessary against some viruses. Nonetheless, the construction of a strategic stockpile of frozen, pathogen-reduced plasma, collected from Ebola-convalescent patients with well-characterized viral neutralization activities, is one example of how to proceed despite existing unknowns.

The health community across the world is looking at plasma or antibody therapy to battle COVID-19. Convalescent plasma has been listed as a therapeutic method by China’s National Health Commission. In India, many states have sought and received the approval of ICMR for convalescent plasma therapy. With the time is running out of our hand and absence of authentic WHO-approved vaccine, convalescent plasma technology can be the right remedial measure for all of us if we want to conquer the Corona.

Sarada Prasanna Pattnaik is based out of Balasore, Odisha. He was earlier a banker and later a faculty at quite a few reputed colleges and institutions. He now teaches civil service aspirants in leading coaching institutes. He is the chief architect of the Vidya Group of Educational Institutions. He is an author and a writer in the civil service coaching arena. Writing is his passion and he loves to pen down his thoughts on varied topics ranging from Literature, Politics, Science & Technology, Finance, Sports and Travel.

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