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Trump Wanted FDA To Fast-Track Blood Plasma Therapy. What Is It?

Convalescent serum or blood plasma from a recovered COVID-19 patients is being studied as a treatment for others with the disease. The FDA is holding off on giving it emergency use authorization.
Arnulfo Franco
/
AP
Convalescent serum or blood plasma from a recovered COVID-19 patients is being studied as a treatment for others with the disease. The FDA is holding off on giving it emergency use authorization.

President Trump suggested in recent comments that there is a treatment for COVID-19 that members of his own administration are slow-walking to thwart his reelection bid.

The treatment is something called convalescent plasma. Since April, the Food and Drug Administration has been encouraging efforts to broaden the use of convalescent plasma and test its safety and effectiveness.

The idea is that people who have been sickened with COVID-19 and then recovered will have antibodies in their blood that helped them fight off the infection. By giving that convalescent plasma to sick patients, those antibodies should in theory help a patient currently sick with COVID-19 recover. It's an approach to treating pandemic diseases that has been around for a century or more.

Blood serum from recovered COVID-19 patients is also being studied as a means of preventing the disease.

It's still unclear whether plasma treatments are effective for people with COVID-19. A recent non-peer-reviewed study posted online reported on more than 30,000 patients receiving convalescent plasma; it showed that the more antibodies there were in a particular batch of convalescent plasma, the more effective the plasma was in preventing death.

But the study was lacking a control group, that is, a group receiving a sham injection, so it's difficult to make firm conclusions about the results. Other studies have failed to show a definitive benefit.

Nonetheless, according to press reports, the FDA was close to granting emergency use authorization for convalescent plasma when several senior officials at the National Institutes of Health raised objections. The NIH scientists argued that the evidence for the treatment's efficacy was thin.

When asked about this at a news conference, President Trump was surprised.

"Well, I hear great things about it," the president said. "It could be a political decision because you have a lot of people over there that don't want to rush things because they want to do it after Nov. 3."

The president said he would check with the FDA after the news conference.

Officials at the FDA and the NIH have insisted all along that their decisions are based on science, not politics.

Although the emergency use authorization would have made the availability of the plasma much simpler for doctors, patients do still have access to convalescent plasma therapy. It is available now under an expanded access program that allows for compassionate use. Doctors who believe it can be helpful can still obtain it for their patients.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Joe Palca is a science correspondent for NPR. Since joining NPR in 1992, Palca has covered a range of science topics — everything from biomedical research to astronomy. He is currently focused on the eponymous series, "Joe's Big Idea." Stories in the series explore the minds and motivations of scientists and inventors. Palca is also the founder of NPR Scicommers – A science communication collective.