An American Airlines flight took off from La Guardia Airport in New York last Wednesday morning, carrying 100 pouches of blood plasma donated by Covid-19 survivors for delivery to Rio de Janeiro. American scientists are hoping Covid-19 patients in Brazil will help them answer a century-old question: Can this golden serum, loaded with antibodies against a pathogen, actually heal the sick?
The truth is that no one knows if it works.
Since April, the Trump administration has funneled $48 million into a program with the Mayo Clinic, allowing more than 53,000 Covid-19 patients to get plasma infusions. Doctors and hospitals desperate to save the sickest patients have been eager to try a therapy that is safe and might work. Tens of thousands more people are now enrolled to get the treatment that’s been trumpeted by everyone from the president to the actor Dwayne Johnson, better known as The Rock.
President Trump on Monday promoted its promise: “You had something very special. You had something that knocked it out. So we want to be able to use it,” he said, calling on Covid-19 survivors to donate their plasma, which he called a “beautiful ingredient.”
But the unexpected demand for plasma has inadvertently undercut the research that could prove that it works. The only way to get convincing evidence is with a clinical trial that compares outcomes for patients who are randomly assigned to get the treatment with those who are given a placebo. Many patients and their doctors — knowing they could get the treatment under the government program — have been unwilling to join clinical trials that might provide them with a placebo instead of the plasma.
The trials have also been stymied by the waning of the virus outbreak in many cities, complicating researchers’ ability to recruit sick people. One of those clinical trials, at Columbia University, sputtered to a halt after the outbreak subsided in New York. One of its leaders, Dr. W. Ian Lipkin, looked for hospitals in other hot spots in the United States to continue the work. But he found few takers.
“Without a randomized control trial, it’s very difficult to be certain that what you have is meaningful,” he said.
As of last week, just 67 people had enrolled in the Columbia study — too few to form sound statistical conclusions. In a last-ditch effort, Dr. Lipkin’s team shipped the plasma to Brazil, where the epidemic is still raging.
Now, at the height of a public health crisis, the government’s push to distribute an unproven treatment to desperately ill patients as quickly as possible could come at the cost of completing clinical trials that would potentially benefit millions around the world by determining whether those treatments actually work.
In a statement, a spokeswoman for the Food and Drug Administration said that the expanded access program was meant to bridge the gap until trials could get underway and “was never intended to substitute for randomized clinical trials, which are critically important for the demonstration of efficacy.”
The F.D.A. is preparing an emergency authorization to use the treatment, according to scientists who have been briefed on the plans. The policy would ease the clerical burden on hospitals to get clearance for transfusions, further hampering clinical trials, researchers said. An F.D.A. spokeswoman declined to comment on whether such an authorization was in the works.
The move would mean the F.D.A. is “yielding to political pressure,” said Dr. Luciana Borio, who oversaw public health preparedness for the National Security Council under Mr. Trump and who was acting chief scientist at the F.D.A. under President Barack Obama.
“I’m not as concerned about the political leaders having a misguided approach to science,” she said. “What I’m really concerned about is scientists having a misguided approach to science.”
On Monday, four former F.D.A. commissioners — including Dr. Scott Gottlieb, who served under Mr. Trump — called for more rigorous clinical trials to evaluate whether plasma is an effective treatment for the coronavirus. “If this is going to work, we need to do it right,” they wrote.
Convalescent plasma, the pale yellow liquid that’s left after blood is stripped of its red and white cells, has been used since the 1890s to treat infectious diseases, including the flu, SARS and Ebola. Scientists believe it may work by giving sick patients the antibodies of those who have recovered from the infection.
Plasma’s potential benefits are also promoted on conservative talk shows, as was hydroxychloroquine, a treatment for malaria that was enthusiastically embraced by Mr. Trump but had not been found effective against the coronavirus in recent clinical trials.
Unlike hydroxychloroquine, which has potentially harmful side effects, plasma was seen as safe and top medical researchers had enthusiastically set out to study it as American hospitals filled with Covid-19 patients.
“We are in a medical crisis — we don’t have alternatives,” said Dr. Arturo Casadevall, a microbiologist at Johns Hopkins University who is the chair of the National Covid-19 Convalescent Plasma Project, a consortium coordinating research into the therapy.
But at least 10 randomized, placebo-controlled trials in the United States have enrolled only a few hundred people. And now, seven months into the health crisis, some scientists say the F.D.A.’s program has undermined their efforts to get answers about plasma’s utility.
“I’ve seen other people describe it as liquid gold,” said Dr. Richard Kaufman, medical director of the transfusion service at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, where he is the principal investigator of a trial that had intended to enroll 220 patients but has enrolled only one. “I would say I have a lot of uncertainty at this point.”
A century of experimentation
Antibodies have been tapped to heal the sick since at least the 1890s, when doctors used the serum of animals to treat diphtheria, a dangerous bacterial disease. Convalescent plasma was used during the 1918 flu pandemic, and so-called serum therapy became a treatment for everything from pneumonia to measles. In 1925, teams of sled dogs traveled hundreds of miles over ice to deliver serum to the Alaskan town Nome, which was battling a diphtheria outbreak.
Although it fell out of favor in the 1940s with the discovery of antibiotics, convalescent plasma is often the first tool that doctors use when they are desperate to treat an emerging epidemic.
So when the coronavirus began spreading this year, doctors in Wuhan, China, as well as in Iran and Italy turned to the old standby.
Dr. Casadevall became one of its earliest U.S. backers, writing an opinion piece in The Wall Street Journal in February and calling colleagues from his Baltimore living room to encourage its study.
By late March, as deaths from the virus rose, Mount Sinai Hospital in New York and Houston Methodist in Texas began transfusing patients with plasma.
As the outbreak spread across the United States, calls grew to expand distribution of plasma. But hospitals could use the plasma on a limited number of patients only if they received emergency approval from the F.D.A. Every day beginning in March, the agency heard from the doctors of hundreds of patients asking for permission to try plasma, according to a spokeswoman for the agency.
A loosely organized group of doctors, including Dr. Casadevall, began pushing for a more coordinated approach. On April 3, the F.D.A. and the Mayo Clinic opened the “expanded access” program, using plasma donated through the American Red Cross.
Extracting plasma is cumbersome. It begins much like a blood donation, with a needle inserted into a vein. The blood is drawn into a machine with a centrifuge, which filters the plasma and returns the rest of the blood to the body. The plasma must be stored at freezing temperatures. It cannot be mass produced.
Dr. R. Scott Wright of the Mayo Clinic, who is helping to run its plasma program, said he was an early advocate for conducting randomized trials of convalescent plasma. But the mechanics of setting up large studies were complicated by early shortages of plasma, coordination via Zoom and the difficulty of predicting where the virus would spread to next.
Still, researchers at major medical centers in the Northeast began setting up studies. Dr. Mila B. Ortigoza, an infectious disease specialist at NYU Langone Health, started a trial with colleagues at Montefiore Medical Center in just weeks, enrolling its first patient on April 17 and condensing years of work into days. But by the time it got started, the pandemic was easing.
“The curve got squashed here in New York,” said Dr. Elliott Bennett-Guerrero, the leader of another randomized trial of plasma at Stony Brook Medicine on Long Island. He said the hospital had enrolled only about 80 of the 500 planned participants. The trial is now stalled.
And the Mayo Clinic’s expanded access program exploded.
“We initially thought that we would enroll 3,000 people,” said Dr. Michael Joyner, the scientist leading the effort. Dr. Casadevall was so inundated with inquiries from patients’ families asking about plasma that he removed his personal email from the Johns Hopkins website.
By June, 20,000 people had received plasma, and the program released a promising report on the method’s safety. But there was no control group for comparison, so the study could not evaluate whether the treatment did any good.
And yet, the treatment is now more popular than ever. Alex M. Azar II, the secretary for health and human services, told governors on a call on Monday that demand for plasma was outstripping supply.
Randomized trials outside the United States have not been able to prove plasma’s effectiveness, either. A trial at seven medical centers in Wuhan, the likely ground zero for the virus, concluded that convalescent plasma did not significantly improve patients’ recovery time.
The Coronavirus Outbreak ›
Frequently Asked Questions
Updated August 4, 2020
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I have antibodies. Am I now immune?
- As of right now, that seems likely, for at least several months. There have been frightening accounts of people suffering what seems to be a second bout of Covid-19. But experts say these patients may have a drawn-out course of infection, with the virus taking a slow toll weeks to months after initial exposure. People infected with the coronavirus typically produce immune molecules called antibodies, which are protective proteins made in response to an infection. These antibodies may last in the body only two to three months, which may seem worrisome, but that’s perfectly normal after an acute infection subsides, said Dr. Michael Mina, an immunologist at Harvard University. It may be possible to get the coronavirus again, but it’s highly unlikely that it would be possible in a short window of time from initial infection or make people sicker the second time.
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I’m a small-business owner. Can I get relief?
- The stimulus bills enacted in March offer help for the millions of American small businesses. Those eligible for aid are businesses and nonprofit organizations with fewer than 500 workers, including sole proprietorships, independent contractors and freelancers. Some larger companies in some industries are also eligible. The help being offered, which is being managed by the Small Business Administration, includes the Paycheck Protection Program and the Economic Injury Disaster Loan program. But lots of folks have not yet seen payouts. Even those who have received help are confused: The rules are draconian, and some are stuck sitting on money they don’t know how to use. Many small-business owners are getting less than they expected or not hearing anything at all.
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What are my rights if I am worried about going back to work?
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Should I refinance my mortgage?
- It could be a good idea, because mortgage rates have never been lower. Refinancing requests have pushed mortgage applications to some of the highest levels since 2008, so be prepared to get in line. But defaults are also up, so if you’re thinking about buying a home, be aware that some lenders have tightened their standards.
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What is school going to look like in September?
- It is unlikely that many schools will return to a normal schedule this fall, requiring the grind of online learning, makeshift child care and stunted workdays to continue. California’s two largest public school districts — Los Angeles and San Diego — said on July 13, that instruction will be remote-only in the fall, citing concerns that surging coronavirus infections in their areas pose too dire a risk for students and teachers. Together, the two districts enroll some 825,000 students. They are the largest in the country so far to abandon plans for even a partial physical return to classrooms when they reopen in August. For other districts, the solution won’t be an all-or-nothing approach. Many systems, including the nation’s largest, New York City, are devising hybrid plans that involve spending some days in classrooms and other days online. There’s no national policy on this yet, so check with your municipal school system regularly to see what is happening in your community.
As in the U.S. trials, the Wuhan study had trouble recruiting participants and concluded early with just 103 volunteers. An analysis recently conducted by researchers, including Drs. Joyner and Casadevall, found that several overseas studies hinted that plasma was effective, but not all of them were randomized.
An Opening for President Trump
The Trump administration has framed convalescent plasma as a rare bright spot in the pandemic.
Eager to present his administration as marching toward a “cure,” Mr. Trump has mentioned plasma alongside remdesivir and dexamethasone, two coronavirus treatments that have been shown to be effective in randomized trials.
Dr. Deborah L. Birx, the leader of the White House’s coronavirus task force, at one point pushed for the federal government to secure 500,000 bags of plasma to store for a possible wave of infections in the fall, according to a senior administration official. She also pushed for plasma transfusions in nursing homes, the official said.
When asked about these claims, a task force official said that Dr. Birx wanted to move quickly to capitalize on the period of time after a person is infected, when their plasma contains higher antibody levels. Dr. Birx said she wanted clinical trials to include vulnerable people in nursing homes, the official added.
Dr. Stephen M. Hahn, the F.D.A. commissioner, began discussing the benefits of plasma at White House briefings in March. In interviews and congressional testimony since then, he has presented it as one of the few therapeutics the agency can publicly endorse.
Last week, he said the F.D.A. was “encouraged by the early promising data that we’ve seen” and that it was “studying these data to determine, ultimately, the safety and efficacy of this product.”
But he added that if plasma “doesn’t turn out to be the treatment we think it might be, remember that your donations still count with the American Blood Centers and the American Red Cross.”
The treatment has the backing of celebrities like the songwriter Dolly Parton, who is financing a randomized trial at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, and Mr. Johnson, who recorded a video pleading with survivors to donate blood.
“The plasma that’s in your blood can literally save lives,” he says in the message. “But we have to act fast.”
Dr. Joyner said that Mayo researchers were preparing to publish a more detailed analysis of the data they had collected through the access program. But he said even he was not sure of the F.D.A.’s plans for the expanded access program.
There is also an effort underway, led by New York medical institutions, to pool the data of unfinished trials, a strategy encouraged by Dr. Francis Collins, the director of the National Institutes of Health. “It is a really, really powerful approach,” said Dr. Liise-anne Pirofski, the chief of infectious diseases at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Medical Center who is leading the clinical trial with Dr. Ortigoza.
But that idea, said Dr. Kaufman of Brigham and Women’s Hospital, is less than ideal. He said he did not plan to participate. “I worry about combining partially finished studies that really may be different,” he said.
Some of the trial investigators, like Dr. Lipkin, are finding new sites where they hope to complete their work. NYU Langone is expanding to hospitals in Connecticut, Florida and Texas. And researchers at Johns Hopkins have begun two trials of convalescent plasma in people who are not yet sick enough to be hospitalized, testing the theory that the treatment might work best earlier in the infection.
Dr. Casadevall said that he still believed randomized trials were the “only way we’re going to know whether it works or not,” but that they should not be put in opposition to Mayo’s program.
“These things can always be second-guessed afterwards,” he said. “But given the likelihood that it would work and given the history of safety, it was worth trying it as a compassionate use. Maybe you can do this in an emergency and still walk out with efficacy data.”
Dr. Lipkin said that, in retrospect, he might have played a role in shaping plasma’s fame, unknowingly undermining his own trial. In March, he appeared on television shows like “Lou Dobbs Tonight” on Fox News, where he extolled its potential benefits — a move that, he speculates, could have led administration officials to move more quickly to expand access.
“I share some responsibility for this,” he said. “I think there are all kinds of arguments one can make based on history, having a precedent. But that’s not a substitute for rigorous science.”
Sheri Fink contributed reporting from Houston. Katie Thomas reported from Chicago, and Noah Weiland from Washington.