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  • You may have been hearing aboutblood plasma therapy,” and there's some exciting preliminary

  • evidence that it may be an option to treat COVID-19.

  • The only problem: we're not 100% sure it will work.

  • - You hear positive stories, but you always have to balance your hope as a physician with

  • the objectivity you try to execute as a scientist.

  • That's why Dr. Joyner and his team have jump-started a national initiative called

  • the Expanded Access Program to determine where plasma therapy fits into the current pandemic

  • and it may just help us prepare for outbreaks in the future, too.

  • First, let's start with the basics.

  • Your blood is about 45% red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets.

  • The rest is plasma, a yellow-clear liquid containing water, clotting factors, CO2, hormones,

  • mineral ions, glucose, and dissolved proteins.

  • Some of those proteins are antibodies.

  • Those who have recovered from COVID-19 have antibodies to SARS-COV-2 swirling through

  • their blood's plasma.

  • So, the idea is this: inject some of that antibody-rich plasma into someone who hasn't

  • yet recovered, and you might help them acquirepassive immunity”–that is, protection

  • against the virus that they didn't have to build themselves.

  • Not only have plasma infusions been used to treat medical emergencies like burns and trauma,

  • as well as bleeding disorders faced by cancer patients, but we've turned to convalescent

  • plasma therapy in past disease outbreaks of SARS and MERS, Ebola, and even during the

  • influenza pandemic in 1918, with mixed results.

  • If we can prove plasma therapy works for COVID-19, it could be a viable option to control the

  • virus's spread.

  • For one thing, plasma donation is relatively simple.

  • Although it takes a bit longer and involves an additional step where the plasma is separated

  • in a centrifuge, the process is largely the same as a regular blood donation.

  • A single donation will yield between two and four units which will go on to be screened

  • for communicable diseases and transferred to a patient in need.

  • And under the Expanded Access Program, this process will be accelerated, offered more

  • widely, and rigorously documented.

  • - I anticipate that within a week we'll be giving you know, 400 or 500 units, maybe even

  • 1,000 units a day.

  • And now it's a question of just monitoring the situation, collecting the data and going

  • from there.

  • But even if it proves effective, plasma therapy isn't without its challenges.

  • Blood compatibility is critical, meaning the universal donor type, AB for plasma, is in

  • even higher demand than the procedure itself.

  • Some research from the Ebola outbreak suggests that patients and donors should be geographically

  • close together to ensure immunity against the right strain of the virus, which could

  • further limit the supply pool.

  • And as with any treatment, there are some risks, including lung injury, circulatory overload,

  • and infectious disease.

  • - I think one of the things we hope to do in this is to understand how the properties

  • of the plasma relate to any changes in the disease trajectory?

  • Do we reduce the risk of being admitted to the intensive care unit, and for people

  • in the intensive care unit, can we shorten their stay?

  • Predictions suggest that this therapy might be most effective when it's given as a preventative,

  • orprophylacticmeasure for those most at risk, or shortly after exposure to the

  • virus.

  • But if it turns out that convalescent plasma is safe and effective at any stage of COVID-19,

  • will all our corona-woes be over?

  • - This is not a panacea.

  • It's a stop gap measure.

  • It may help in a selected group of patients under a selected group of circumstances.

  • And it's really a chain of developments from this sort of first wave to the second wave

  • being a concentrated product, to the third wave being perhaps something from biotech,

  • maybe, maybe not, and ultimately a vaccine.

  • Until then, even if COVID-19 convalescent plasma disappoints in clinical trials,

  • Dr. Joyner is hopeful that setting up a system to study it will help build the breakwaters

  • we need to be more prepared whenever the next wave of infectious disease hits.

  • - Anytime you have an opportunity like this, a disaster, you need to learn from the process.

  • And so the question we need to ask ourselves is, what sort of a baseline infrastructure

  • do we need for 100 year outbreaks for novel infectious diseases?

  • I think if you had reasonable strategies for social distancing, disease tracking and efforts

  • at a contact tracing, and a comprehensive outbreak control strategy when there are hotspots,

  • this product could be used to help further control those hotspots.

  • If you've recovered from a confirmed case of COVID-19, you might qualify as a donor.

  • To find out, visit the National Covid-19 Convalescent Plasma Project's website linked below.

  • And if you want to learn more about COVID-19, check out our playlist here.

  • Make sure to subscribe and thanks for watching.

You may have been hearing aboutblood plasma therapy,” and there's some exciting preliminary

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