key: cord-0689190-glyerahz authors: Hueso, Thomas; Godron, Anne-Sophie; Lanoy, Emilie; Pacanowski, Jérôme; Levi, Laura I.; Gras, Emmanuelle; Surgers, Laure; Guemriche, Amina; Meynard, Jean-Luc; Pirenne, France; Idri, Salim; Tiberghien, Pierre; Morel, Pascal; Besson, Caroline; Duléry, Rémy; Lamure, Sylvain; Hermine, Olivier; Gagneux-Brunon, Amandine; Freymond, Nathalie; Grabar, Sophie; Lacombe, Karine title: Convalescent plasma improves overall survival in patients with B-cell lymphoid malignancy and COVID-19: a longitudinal cohort and propensity score analysis date: 2022-02-01 journal: Leukemia DOI: 10.1038/s41375-022-01511-6 sha: 79ef57b0aef2de670bcfcbfd8e39fe1bf13672f9 doc_id: 689190 cord_uid: glyerahz Patients with hematological malignancy and COVID-19 display a high mortality rate. In such patients, immunosuppression due to underlying disease and previous specific treatments impair humoral response, limiting viral clearance. Thus, COVID-19 convalescent plasma (CCP) therapy appears as a promising approach through the transfer of neutralizing antibodies specific to SARS-CoV-2. We report the effect of CCP in a cohort of 112 patients with hematological malignancy and COVID-19 and a propensity score analysis on subgroups of patients with B-cell lymphoid disease treated (n = 81) or not (n = 120) with CCP between May 1, 2020 and April 1, 2021. The overall survival of the whole cohort was 65% (95% CI = 56–74.9) and 77.5% (95% CI = 68.5–87.7) for patients with B-cell neoplasm. Prior anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody therapy was associated with better overall survival, whereas age, high blood pressure, and COVID-19 severity were associated with a poor outcome. After an inverse probability of treatment weighting approach, we observed in anti-CD20–exposed patients with B-cell lymphoid disease a decreased mortality of 63% (95% CI = 31–80) in the CCP-treated group compared to the CCP-untreated subgroup, confirmed in the other sensitivity analyses. Convalescent plasma may be beneficial in COVID-19 patients with B-cell neoplasm who are unable to mount a humoral immune response. Patients with hematological malignancy and SARS-CoV-2 infection display a high mortality rate with an estimated risk of death of 34% that reaches 39% in hospitalized patients [1, 2] . In such patients, several studies highlighted that both underlying cellular or humoral immunosuppression may hamper virus clearance resulting in prolonged shedding and a higher risk of severe COVID-19 [3, 4] . Furthermore, anti-SARS-CoV-2 vaccine response in patients with hematological malignancy is lower compared to the general population, especially in patients with B-cell lymphoid disease [5, 6] . Thus, therapeutic approaches to inhibit viral replication and enhance viral clearance are mandatory in this specific population. Early transfusion of high titer COVID-19 convalescent plasma (CCP) has emerged as a promising therapy to target SARS-CoV-2 and achieve clinical recovery [7] [8] [9] . In France, CCP has been proposed in a national monitored access program, notably to hospitalized COVID-19 patients with underlying immunosuppression such as patients with hematological malignancy. While most randomized trials have not reported a benefit of CCP in a general population with COVID-19 [10] , we observed that B-cell depleted patients with protracted COVID-19 may benefit from CCP transfusion along with a decrease of all inflammatory parameters, oxygen weaning, and viral clearance [11] . Accordingly, a retrospective propensity score-matched analysis of 966 patients with a wide range of hematological malignancies, among whom 143 received CCP, and reported that CCP transfusion was associated with 40% lower mortality [12] , without taking into consideration immortal time bias and specificity of each hematological malignancy [13] . Building on these encouraging results, we report the outcome after CCP transfusion in a cohort of COVID-19 patients with hematological malignancy as well as on the results of a nested comparison of the survival among patients with B-cell neoplasm treated or not with CCP. We analyzed all patients with hematological malignancy and virologically documented COVID-19 included from May 1, 2020 to April 1, 2021 in a CCP monitored access program implemented in France (CCP cohort). Underlying disease included B-cell lymphoid neoplasm (such as diffuse B-cell lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, follicular lymphoma, mantle cell lymphoma, marginal zone lymphoma, or B-acute lymphoblastic leukemia) and plasma-cell neoplasm requiring treatment and myeloid neoplasm (myelodysplastic syndrome or acute myeloid leukemia). The subset of patients with B-lymphoid neoplasm in the CCP cohort was then compared in a propensity score analysis to a cohort of patients with the similar disease who were not treated with CCP in French hospitals during the same successive COVID-19 outbreak periods (Fig. 1) . Both cohorts were treated as per the standard of care for COVID-19. Patients gave their written informed consent for the retrospective data collection, and ethical clearance was obtained from the French Infectious Diseases Society (IRB number: 00011642). All patients included in the CCP monitored access program received four ABO-compatible CCP units (200-220 mL each), usually two units/day over 2 days (day 0 and day +1) and more rarely one unit/day over 4 days. Most often, patients received CCP from four different donors. Convalescent donors were eligible for plasma donation 15 days after the resolution of COVID-19 symptoms. Collected apheresis plasma underwent pathogen reduction (Intercept blood system; Cerus, Concord, CA) and standard testing, as per current regulations in France. In addition, anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibody content was assessed in each donation, with a requirement for a SARS-CoV-2 seroneutralization titer ≥40 (≥80 after October 2020) and/or an immunoglobulin G enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (EUROIMMUN, Bussy-Saint-Martin, France) ratio > 5.6 (≥8 after October 2020) [14] . Clinical parameters (temperature and oxygen need) as well as grading on the WHO scale for COVID-19 severity and biological parameters, including inflammatory markers (C-reactive protein (CRP), ferritin, fibrinogen, and D-dimers), were recorded at the time of CCP transfusion (day 0) [15] . SARS-CoV-2 serological status and circulating lymphocyte subpopulations at day 0 were assessed. PCR in the nasopharyngeal swab (with cycle threshold when available) was performed at day 0 and day +7 after CCP. Adverse events were recorded. The primary outcomes were 90-day overall survival (OS) and factors associated with the risk of death in all patients with hematological malignancy and COVID-19 after CCP transfusion treated in the monitoring access program. Then, among patients with B-cell neoplasm, OS from the first day of hospitalization for COVID-19 of patients who received CCP (CCP group) was compared to the survival of those who did not (standard group). Secondary outcomes included safety and kinetics of inflammatory parameters after CCP transfusion. Continuous variables are described with their medians and interquartile ranges, whereas categorical variables are expressed as raw numbers and percentages. In the CCP cohort study, a Wilcoxon-paired test was performed to compare clinical and biological parameters at day 0 and day +7 after CCP transfusion. Ninety-day OS was evaluated using Kaplan-Meier estimates from the time of CCP transfusion. A log-rank test was used to compare survival curves. Crude and adjusted hazard ratios (HR) of death were estimated by univariable and multivariable Cox proportional hazard model. The multivariable model was built after stepwise selection of the variables from the variables with p value below 0.05 in univariable regressions. Covariates considered in univariable analysis were gender, age (≥70 years versus below), comorbidities (diabetes, high blood pressure, and body mass index), type of hematological malignancy, previous B-cell depletion therapy such as anti-CD20 or anti-CD19 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), time between symptoms onset and CCP transfusion, and disease status (complete remission, partial remission/stable disease, and progressive disease). To further evaluate the effectiveness of CCP, we compared the 81 CCPtreated B-cell neoplasm patients (after exclusion of 2 patients with B-acute lymphoblastic leukemia) of the CCP cohort to 120 CCP-untreated B-cell neoplasm patients from the cohort partly described in Dulery et al. study (standard group) [16] . To estimate the effect of CCP on survival in nonrandomized settings where patients' characteristics associated with CCP T. Hueso et al. exposure could differ in the two groups, an inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) approach was retained in an effort to control for indication bias in several population analyses. An individual propensity score (i.e., the probability of treatment by CCP) was retrieved from a logistic regression model, including potential confounders, both associated with prognostic of survival and CCP indication: age ("<65 years" vs. "≥65 years"), comorbidity (high blood pressure or diabetes or BMI ≥ 25 kg/m 2 yes vs. no), and corticosteroid therapy (yes vs. no). A pseudopopulation was built by weighting observations by propensity scores. In order to check if weighting improved the comparability of the two groups, absolute standardized differences were estimated in the unweighted and weighted samples. According to IPTW common practice, standardized differences <0.20 were considered negligible. For each analysis, the distribution of the probability of receiving CCP in the two groups was examined visually in order to see if overlap existed and the positivity assumption was not violated ( Supplementary Fig. S1 ). Then, HRs of death associated with CCP were derived from weighted Cox proportional hazards. Estimates of HR of death associated with CCP from the univariable and multivariable (adjusted for variables included in the propensity score and described above) unweighted Cox proportional hazards model were also provided for the main and sensitivity analyses population. Of note, the number of variables included in both IPTW and multivariable models was limited by the relatively low number of events; therefore, only variables strongly associated with the indication of CCP and with sufficient numbers of patients for each modality were kept ( Supplementary Fig. S2 ). The main analysis was restricted to patients with B-cell lymphoid disease previously treated with anti-CD20 therapy and who were alive 16 days after hospitalization for COVID-19, which corresponded to the median time of CCP transfusion after hospitalization. In order to limit the immortal time bias that can arise because patients treated with CCP had to survive long enough after hospitalization to receive CCP [13] , a landmark approach was chosen. Follow-up of patients who received CCP after more than 16 days following hospitalization was censored at the time of CCP initiation. Since the use of CCP could differ in terms of area and period of recruitment, and exposure to cancer therapies and to COVID-19 medications that were not accounted for in IPTW, several sensitivity analyses in which baseline was the date of hospitalization were conducted to assess for the robustness of the main results: (i) in the overall population of patients exposed and nonexposed to CCP; (ii) in a population restricted to anti-CD20 therapy pretreated patients, excluding patients over 85 years, and patients preexposed to tocilizumab, remdesivir, or azithromycin/hydroxychloroquine; (iii) in a population excluding the first epidemic wave from March 2020 to June 2020; and (iv) in a population restricted to Paris region (Ile-de-France area, see Fig. 1 and Supplementary Table S1 ). Another sensitivity landmark analysis with baseline at the date of hospitalization plus 16 days has been carried out in patients alive 16 days after hospitalization. Of note, other sensitivity analyses on the overall population were also adjusted for gender. All analyses were done using R software version 3.6.1 and SAS ® Software version 9.4 (Cary, North Carolina, USA). A p value below 0.05 denoted statistical significance. One hundred and twelve patients (33 F/79 M) aged 62.5 (range) (20-88) years with hematological malignancy and COVID-19 received CCP. Among them, 83 (74%) patients were treated for B-lymphoid neoplasm, 10 (9%) for myeloid neoplasm, and 19 (17%) for multiple myeloma. Eighty-one (72%) patients had received anti-CD20 or anti-CD19 targeted therapy at a median of 42 (interquartile range) (137-14) days before the first symptoms of COVID-19. Ninety-eight patients (87%) patients had a negative SARS-CoV-2 serology at the time of CCP transfusion. The median circulating B-lymphocytes count was 0 (interquartile range) (0-0)/ mm 3 in 58 evaluable patients with B-cell lymphoid disease, 9 (0-48)/mm 3 in 6 patients with myeloid neoplasm, and 7 (1-17)/ mm 3 in 9 patients with plasma-cell neoplasm. Of note, 11/83 (13%) patients with B-lymphoid neoplasm, 2/10 (20%) with myeloid neoplasm, and 8/19 (42%) with plasma-cell neoplasm were mechanically ventilated (WHO scale 7), at the time of CCP transfusion. Previous COVID-19 treatments included corticosteroids (n = 72, 64%), tocilizumab (n = 8, 7%), and remdesivir (n = 13, 12%). No patients received anti-spike mAbs or were vaccinated. The remaining patient characteristics are described in Table 1 . Transfusion-related adverse events were reported in a limited number of patients and included three allergies (two minor, one severe) and two cases of transient increase in oxygen requirement of uncertain imputability. CCP transfusion was associated with decreased (d+7 vs. d0) temperature (p < 0.0001), CRP (p < 0.0001), ferritin (p < 0.0001), and fibrinogen (p = 0.026). Conversely, PCR cycle threshold values significantly increased (p = 0.00015) (Fig. 2) . (20) Mantle cell lymphoma 11 (10) Marginal zone lymphoma 4 (3) Chronic lymphocytic leukemia 13 (12) Waldenström macroglobulinemia 2 (2) B-acute lymphoblastic leukemia 2 (2) Myeloid neoplasm, n (%) 10 (9) Myelodysplastic syndrome 2 (2) Acute myeloid leukemia 8 (7) Plasma-cell neoplasm, n (%) 19 (17) Previous anti-CD19 or anti-CD20 mAbs, n (%) Previous anti-CD38 mAbs, n (%) 10 (9) Median time between last anti-CD19 or anti-CD20 mAbs and COVID-19, days (IQR) Previous stem cell transplantation, n (%) (Fig. 4) . The numbers of patients included in each population analysis are provided in the flowchart in Fig. 1 . The main population analysis included 147 patients pre-exposed to anti-CD20 therapy and alive on day 16 after hospitalization for COVID ( Table 3) . The characteristics of patients of each analyzed population are detailed in Supplementary Table S1. This table shows that patients treated with CCP differ from the untreated ones, including for variables that could not be included in the propensity score. To account for the latter variables, sensitivity analysis populations restricted to specific wave, to pre-exposure to anti-CD20, or to the specific area of hospitalization were performed. In the main IPTW analysis, the exposure to CCP was associated with a 63% (95% CI = 31-80) decrease in the risk of death in the 16-day anti-CD20 pre-exposed population. The HR estimated by IPTW varied across the different analysis populations from 40% in the waves 2-4 population to 63% in the main analysis population as shown in Fig. 5 . Multivariable models provided similar results to IPTW (Supplementary Table S2 ). The addition of gender to the propensity score did not modify the estimation of the effect of the convalescent plasma exposure. HR of death associated with each variable included in the propensity score are provided in Supplementary Table S3 . Our study reports the effect of CCP in a large and representative cohort of patients with hematological malignancy and who were hospitalized for severe COVID-19. Overall, 90-day survival was 64.9% for the whole cohort and 77.9% in the B-cell neoplasm subgroup with an OS benefit estimated between 43% and 63% after IPTW approach supporting the results of the Thompson et al. study [12] . We also report a significant decrease of all inflammatory parameters as well as negativation of the nasopharyngeal PCR swab at d+7, consistent with our previous report [11] . Furthermore, CCP infusion was well tolerated [17] . As previously described, age and comorbidities such as high blood pressure and COVID-19 severity emerged as the most important risk factors of death due to COVID-19 [18] . Interestingly, although an increased risk of death was associated with B-depletion therapy such as anti-CD20 or anti-CD19 mAbs in a recently published retrospective lymphoma cohort [16] , previous B-cell therapy depletion was strongly associated with better OS in patients receiving convalescent plasma even after adjustment for confounding factors. Since most patients in our study (87%) transfused with CCP had negative serology for COVID-19, we assume that such patients were unable to produce neutralizing SARS-CoV-2 antibodies due to the underlying hematological disease or the previously administered drugs targeting B-cells [19] . Subsequent transfer of neutralizing antibodies in such patients by means of CCP transfusion resulted in the control of viral replication and allowed for clinical recovery. The poor benefit of CCP transfusion in patients with plasma-cell or myeloid neoplasm as well as the uncertain benefit of CCP in the general COVID-19 population able to mount humoral response supports our hypothesis. To further investigate the effect of CCP, we compared the subset of CCP-treated patients with B-cell lymphoid malignancy and COVID-19 to a similar cohort of patients who were treated with standard of care only. The methodology sought to control for Table 3 . Characteristics of patients with B-lymphoid neoplasm according to analyzed population (main analysis and overall population analyses). Overall population Group (14) 11 (9) Waldenström macroglobulinemia The proportion of treated patients differed greatly among the strata of variables included in the propensity score such as age: 54% of treated in <65 years vs. 36% in ≥65 years in RCT-like population, 48% of treated in absence of comorbidity vs. 35% in presence of comorbidity in the overall population, 14% of treated in patients not receiving corticotherapy vs. 30% in patients receiving corticotherapy. Moreover, this table shows that the proportion of treated patients differed also for variables that could not be included in the propensity score but defined sensitivity analysis populations such as wave, pre-exposure to anti-CD20, and area of hospitalization. CP convalescent plasma, AH arterial hypertension, BMI body mass index, PS* included in the propensity score, N number of patients, WHO World Health Organization, mAbs monoclonal antibodies. biases inherent to the observational design of this retrospective comparison; this included indication and immortal time biases. We showed that patients with B-cell lymphoid disease and preexposed to anti-CD20 therapy treated with CCP exhibited a significantly better survival probability than those who did not receive CCP. This important finding supports the results reported in a US-retrospective cohort [12] . as well as the positive trend observed in immunosuppressed patients (odds ratio (OR) 1.51 (0.80-2.92)) included in the recently reported REMAP-CAP trial [20] , and confirms the essential role of convalescent plasma in the COVID-19 therapeutics landscape of patients with B-cell malignancy. However, those results present several limitations and raise several questions. In our longitudinal cohort, the risk of death reaches 80% and 64% for myeloid neoplasm and plasma-cell neoplasm, respectively, that is twofold higher than reported in previous studies [1] . We must point out a higher COVID-19 severity with 34% of patients with myeloid and plasma-cell neoplasm requiring mechanical ventilation, whereas only 13% for B-cell neoplasm at the time of CCP. Similarly, previous studies reported a better outcome after early CCP transfusion in non-hospitalized patients [21] . Of note, we observed a lower OS in patients transfused within the first ten days after symptoms onset in univariable analysis, an association that disappeared in the multivariable analysis. A similar observation was made in the Recovery trial (in the CCP arm as well as the control arm) and may reflect more severe disease in patients hospitalized early in the course of the disease [22] . Furthermore, 62% of patients transfused earlier (within the first 10 days) transfusion in our cohort presented with myeloid or plasma-cell neoplasm. In our retrospective nested analysis, data were collected prospectively from two data sources: one for patients exposed to CCP and another one for patients not exposed to CCP. Such a comparison could not identify the causal effect of treatment exposure with the level of proof provided by randomized clinical trials. We have tried to limit bias by using statistical methods to control indication bias (propensity score) and the immortal bias (time-lead analysis). The benefit of CCP appears to be robustly identified in all our sensitivity analyses. In addition, the main analysis, which allows for stricter controls on indication and immortal bias, use of 16-day landmark and IPTW identifies the strongest effect. We also have no data on the type of viral strain that infected the patients who received CCP, and thus could not analyze the impact of virological parameters in the response to CCP. However, during the inclusion period, SARS-CoV-2 strains circulating in France were mainly the Wuhan original strain and its Alpha variant. Therefore, we cannot extend our results to the Delta variant of concern that is currently becoming dominant worldwide. Plasma from convalescent and vaccinated donors exhibit high titer crossvariant antibodies that may provide a higher efficacy than the CCP used in our study [23] [24] [25] . We presently favor the issuing of such CCP for the treatment of immunosuppressed patients with B-cell malignancies [26] . Although our study generates some strong arguments in favor of the use of CCP in B-cell depleted COVID-19 patients, several recent issues need to be considered. Indeed, initiation of the anti-SARS-CoV-2 vaccination [27] , the availability and use of antispike mAbs in patients at risk of developing a severe form of COVID-19 [28] , and the emergence of SARS-CoV-2 variants have changed the course of COVID-19 outbreak. Firstly, none of the patients in both cohorts (CCP-treated and non-CCP-treated) were vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2. Although prospective randomized trials strongly support the efficacy of vaccination in the general population, results are less favorable in immunosuppressed patients, especially patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia or multiple myeloma who exhibit a lower serological response despite two administrations of BNT162b2 mRNA COVID-19 vaccine [5, 29, 30] . Further investigations are needed to evaluate the efficacy of vaccination on mortality linked to COVID-19 in such patients. Secondly, use of anti-spike mAb opened a new perspective, especially in frail patients with a reduction of related hospitalization or death in mild to moderate COVID-19 patients [31] . Besides the cost of such an approach (over 2000 euros per administration compared to ≈120 euros/CCP) and possibly limited availability, immune escape mutations have been described especially in patients with B-cell lymphoid disease, justifying a successful treatment rescue with CCP [32, 33] . In light of this, the emergence of variants due to protracted shedding or therapyrelated selection [34, 35] remains the most important challenge to face. In our series, although we did not assess the SARS-CoV-2 lineages, we did not observe a difference in OS between the three epidemic outbreaks. In conclusion, among patients with hematological malignancy and COVID-19, CCP represents an interesting approach, especially in patients with B-cell lymphoid neoplasm and who are pretreated with anti-CD20 mAbs. 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TH, KL, PT, CB, and RD designed the study and wrote the manuscript. TH, SG and EL analyzed data and performed statistical analyses. TH, A-SG, JP, J-LM, LIL, EG, LS, AG, FP, SI, PM, SL, OH, AG-B, and NF managed and followed-up patients, collected data, and revised and approved manuscript. This study was supported by the program Emergency Support Instrument (ESI) of the European Commission (project CCPEFS, grant number 101021793) and Sorbonne University. The authors declare no competing interests. Supplementary information The online version contains supplementary material available at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41375-022-01511-6.Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to Thomas Hueso or Karine Lacombe.Reprints and permission information is available at http://www.nature.com/ reprintsPublisher's note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.