Journal article

Effect of Convalescent Plasma on Organ Support-Free Days in Critically Ill Patients with COVID-19: A Randomized Clinical Trial

LJ Estcourt, AF Turgeon, ZK McQuilten, BJ McVerry, F Al-Beidh, D Annane, YM Arabi, DM Arnold, A Beane, P Bégin, W Van Bentum-Puijk, LR Berry, Z Bhimani, JE Birchall, MJM Bonten, CA Bradbury, FM Brunkhorst, M Buxton, JL Callum, M Chassé Show all

JAMA Journal of the American Medical Association | Published : 2021

Abstract

Importance: The evidence for benefit of convalescent plasma for critically ill patients with COVID-19 is inconclusive. Objective: To determine whether convalescent plasma would improve outcomes for critically ill adults with COVID-19. Design, Setting, and Participants: The ongoing Randomized, Embedded, Multifactorial, Adaptive Platform Trial for Community-Acquired Pneumonia (REMAP-CAP) enrolled and randomized 4763 adults with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 between March 9, 2020, and January 18, 2021, within at least 1 domain; 2011 critically ill adults were randomized to open-label interventions in the immunoglobulin domain at 129 sites in 4 countries. Follow-up ended on April 19, 2021. Int..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Institute of Child Health and Human Development


Funding Acknowledgements

This platform trial has 4 regional nonprofit sponsors: Monash University, Melbourne, Australia (Australasian sponsor); Utrecht Medical Center, Utrecht, the Netherlands (European sponsor); St Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada (Canadian sponsor); and the Global Coalition for Adaptive Research, San Francisco, California (US sponsor). This study was additionally funded by grant 602525 FP7-health-2013-innovation-1 from the European Union Platform for European Preparedness Against Reemerging Epidemics, grants APP1101719 and APP1116530 from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council, grant APP2002132 from the Australian Medical Research Future Fund, grant 16/631 from the New Zealand Health Research Council, grant 447335 from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research COVID-19 Rapid Research, grant 158584 from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research Innovative Clinical Trials Program, grant CTN 2014-012 from the Health Research Board of Ireland, grant PHRC-20-0147 from the French Ministry of Health, and grant 215522 from theWellcome Trust Innovations Project and funding from the National Institute for Health Research, the Department of Health and Social Care, the EU Programme Emergency Support Instrument, the NHS Blood and Transplant Research and Development Programme, the National Institute for Health Research, the National Institute for Health Research Imperial Biomedical Research Centre, the UPMC Learning While Doing Program, the Translational Breast Cancer Research Consortium, the Pittsburgh Foundation, and the Minderoo Foundation. The Australian government funds the Australian Red Cross Lifeblood for the provision of blood products and services. The collection of plasma in the United Kingdom was funded by European Union SoHo grants from the Department of Health and Social Care. Dr Turgeon is the Canada Research Chair in Critical Care Neurology and Trauma. Dr McQuilten is supported by emerging leader fellowship APP194811 from the National Health and Medical Research Council. Dr Gordon is funded by research professorship 2015-06-18 from the National Institute for Health Research. Dr Shankar-Hari is funded by clinician scientist fellowship 2016-16-011 from the National Institute for Health Research.