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  • Convalescent Plasma Might Lessen H5N1 Mortality-empirical therapy against Spanish flu



    Convalescent Plasma Might Lessen H5N1 Mortality

    By Michael Smith, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today
    Reviewed by Robert Jasmer, MD; Assistant Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco
    August 29, 2006


    Review
    WASHINGTON, Aug. 29 -- An empirical therapy used to battle the Spanish flu early in the 20th century may be a valuable tool if the 21st century avian flu turns into a human pandemic, researchers here suggested.


    In the face of the 1918-1919 Spanish flu pandemic, physicians in several centers used serum from convalescing patients as a treatment for the pneumonia that was killing many of their patients, according to Thomas Luke, M.D., of the U.S. Navy's Bureau of Medicine and Surgery.


    A meta-analysis of eight reports of those treatments suggested that they might have been on the right track, Dr. Luke and colleagues reported in the Aug. 29 issue of Annals of Internal Medicine.


    Patients with influenza pneumonia had what appears to be a "clinically important benefit" when they were given blood products from those who were recovering from the illness, Dr. Luke and colleagues said.


    The finding may be important if the H5N1 strain of avian influenza, now raging in parts of Asia, becomes a pandemic human strain, because one convalescing patient could produce plasma "sufficient to treat multiple patients with H5N1 influenza," the researchers said.


    The eight studies involved 1,703 patients, the researchers said. Treated patients, often selected because of more severe illness, were compared with untreated controls with influenza pneumonia in the same hospital or ward.


    All eight showed a benefit for the treatment, with an overall crude case-fatality rate of 16% (54 of 336) among treated patients and 37% (452 of 1,219) among controls, for a 21-percentage-point difference in mortality risk.


    Across the studies, the difference in mortality risk for treated patients compared to controls ranged from 8% to 26%.


    There was also a benefit for early treatment -- before the fourth day of pneumonia complications. Overall, the crude case-fatality rate was 19% (28 of 148) among patients who received early treatment 59% (49 of 83) among patients who received treatment after four or more days of pneumonia complications.


    Adverse effects included chill reactions and possible exacerbations of symptoms in a few patients, the researchers said.


    The finding, however, should not be taken as a gold standard, the researchers said. There were only a few studies and they all had methodological limitations. In particular, none of them was a blinded, randomized, placebo-controlled trial.


    Also, there were no standard dosages and definitions, disruptions caused by World War I may have hindered the ability to record data, and wartime censorship may have led to publication bias, the researchers said.


    Nonetheless, the data imply, Dr. Luke and colleagues said, that "convalescent human H5N1 plasma could be an effective, timely, and widely available treatment for patients with H5N1 influenza during outbreaks and pandemics."


    Clinical trials should test the idea, they argued.


    That suggestion was echoed in an accompanying editorial by John Treanor, M.D., of the University of Rochester (N.Y.) Medical Center. "Controlled clinical studies done now will probably pay a considerable dividend when the pandemic begins," Dr. Treanor argued.


    Despite the limitations of the original studies, "the concept is important and it should be explored further, especially given our lack of proven interventions to prevent or treat illness due to H5N1 influenza," he said.


    Many hurdles exist, Dr. Treanor noted. For one thing, it is not even known yet whether patients who recover from H5N1 influenza have high levels of antibody. Also, the understanding of the human immune response to H5N1 infection is not complete and it isn't known what level of antibody will confer protection, or what dose of serum would produce useful antibody levels in patients.


    The H5N1 avian flu strain has so far shown little sign of easy human-to-human transmission, which would be essential for it to become a pandemic. However, when humans have caught the disease, usually from infected birds, it has had a high case fatality rate. As of Aug. 23, the World Health Organization reported 241 cases, resulting in 141 deaths.

    Additional URI & the Flu Coverage


    Earn CME/CE credit for reading the news.

    Primary source: Annals of Internal Medicine
    Source reference:
    Luke, TC et al. "Meta-Analysis: Convalescent Blood Products for Spanish Influenza Pneumonia: A Future H5N1 Treatment?" Ann Intern Med 2006; 145(8).

    Additional source: Annals of Internal Medicine
    Source reference:
    Treanor, JJ. "Avian Influenza: Exploring All the Avenues." Ann Intern Med 2006; 145(8).

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Disclaimer
    MedPage Today Action Points

    Advise patients who ask that the H5N1 avian flu strain is so far mainly confined to birds, and appears so far to lack the ability to be transmitted easily from person to person.

    Note that this study suggests a possible treatment for some of the complications of flu infection, based on therapies that were tried with some success during the Spanish flu pandemic in the early years of last century.

    Caution that clinical trials will be needed to determine if the treatment -- using blood products from people convalescing from the disease -- works in cases of H5N1 infection.

    __________________________________________________ __________

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  • #2
    Re: Convalescent Plasma Might Lessen H5N1 Mortality-empirical therapy against Spanish flu

    The article in question...
    a very different approach...


    http://www.annals.org/cgi/content/ab...610170-00139v1

    REVIEW

    Meta-Analysis: Convalescent Blood Products for Spanish Influenza Pneumonia: A Future H5N1 Treatment?

    </NOBR><NOBR>Thomas C. Luke, MD, MTMH</NOBR>; <NOBR>Edward M. Kilbane, MD, MPH</NOBR>; <NOBR>Jeffrey L. Jackson, MD, MPH</NOBR>; and <NOBR>Stephen L. Hoffman, MD, DTMH</NOBR>


    17 October 2006 | Volume 145 Issue 8

    Background: Studies from the Spanish influenza era reported<SUP> </SUP>that transfusion of influenza-convalescent human blood products<SUP> </SUP>reduced mortality in patients with influenza complicated by<SUP> </SUP>pneumonia. Treatments for H5N1 influenza are unsatisfactory,<SUP> </SUP>and convalescent human plasma containing H5N1 antibodies could<SUP> </SUP>be an effective therapy during outbreaks and pandemics.<SUP> </SUP>
    Purpose: To see whether transfusion with influenza-convalescent<SUP> </SUP>human blood products reduced the risk for death in patients<SUP> </SUP>with Spanish influenza pneumonia.<SUP> </SUP>
    Data Sources: Manual search of English-language journals from<SUP> </SUP>1918 to 1925. Citations from retrieved studies were also searched.<SUP> </SUP>
    Study Selection: Published English-language studies that had<SUP> </SUP>at least 10 patients in the treatment group, used convalescent<SUP> </SUP>blood products to treat Spanish influenza pneumonia in a hospital<SUP> </SUP>setting, and reported on a control or comparison group.<SUP> </SUP>
    Data Extraction: Two investigators independently extracted<SUP> </SUP>data on study characteristics, outcomes, adverse events, and<SUP> </SUP>quality.<SUP> </SUP>
    Data Synthesis: Eight relevant studies involving 1703 patients<SUP> </SUP>were found. Treated patients, who were often selected because<SUP> </SUP>of more severe illness, were compared with untreated controls<SUP> </SUP>with influenza pneumonia in the same hospital or ward. The overall<SUP> </SUP>crude case-fatality rate was 16% (54 of 336) among treated patients<SUP> </SUP>and 37% (452 of 1219) among controls. The range of absolute<SUP> </SUP>risk differences in mortality between the treatment and control<SUP> </SUP>groups was 8% to 26% (pooled risk difference, 21% [95% CI, 15%<SUP> </SUP>to 27%]). The overall crude case-fatality rate was 19% (28 of<SUP> </SUP>148) among patients who received early treatment (after <4<SUP> </SUP>days of pneumonia complications) and 59% (49 of 83) among patients<SUP> </SUP>who received late treatment (after 4 days of pneumonia complications).<SUP> </SUP>The range of absolute risk differences in mortality between<SUP> </SUP>the early treatment group and the late treatment group was 26%<SUP> </SUP>to 50% (pooled risk difference, 41% [CI, 29% to 54%]). Adverse<SUP> </SUP>effects included chill reactions and possible exacerbations<SUP> </SUP>of symptoms in a few patients.<SUP> </SUP>
    Limitations: Studies were few and had many methodologic limitations.<SUP> </SUP>No study was a blinded, randomized, or placebo-controlled trial.<SUP> </SUP>Some pertinent studies may have been missed.<SUP> </SUP>
    Conclusions: Patients with Spanish influenza pneumonia who<SUP> </SUP>received influenza-convalescent human blood products may have<SUP> </SUP>experienced a clinically important reduction in the risk for<SUP> </SUP>death. Convalescent human H5N1 plasma could be an effective,<SUP> </SUP>timely, and widely available treatment that should be studied<SUP> </SUP>in clinical trials.<SUP> </SUP>

    <TABLE cellPadding=10 border=1><TBODY><TR bgColor=#f5f5f5><TD>
    Editors' Notes <TABLE height=1 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width="100%" bgColor=#009982 height=1></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

    Context
    • Studies of Spanish influenza that evaluated effects<SUP> </SUP>of transfusion with influenza-convalescent blood products might<SUP> </SUP>offer insights regarding potential treatments for H5N1 influenza.

    Contribution
    • This<SUP> </SUP>review of 8 controlled studies published in English-language<SUP> </SUP>medical literature between 1918 to 1925 found that transfusion<SUP> </SUP>with influenza-convalescent human blood products may have reduced<SUP> </SUP>risk for death in hospitalized patients with Spanish influenza<SUP> </SUP>complicated by pneumonia. Transfusions caused some chill reactions.

    Cautions
    • Studies<SUP> </SUP>had many methodologic limitations.

    Implications
    • Studies<SUP> </SUP>from the Spanish influenza era support the idea that convalescent<SUP> </SUP>human H5N1 plasma could be an effective, accessible treatment<SUP> </SUP>that should be studied in clinical trials.

    ?The Editors

    </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

    Author and Article Information <TABLE height=1 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width="100%" bgColor=#009982 height=1></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
    <!-- FN --><A name=FN0><!-- null -->From the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, U.S. Navy, Washington, DC; Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland; and Protein Potential LLC, Rockville Maryland.
    Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of<SUP> </SUP>the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy<SUP> </SUP>or position of the Department of the Navy, Department of the<SUP> </SUP>Army, Department of Defense, or the U.S. Government.<SUP> </SUP>
    Acknowledgments: The authors thank Jan K. Herman, PhD, and Andre<SUP> </SUP>B. Sobocinski of the U.S. Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery<SUP> </SUP>Historical Office for assistance with the search; Lieutenant<SUP> </SUP>Laura L. Jensen, USN, for translation of the Russian medical<SUP> </SUP>literature referenced in this article; Commander Steven E. Allen,<SUP> </SUP>USN, of the U.S. Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery Blood Program<SUP> </SUP>Office for assistance in blood component collection and therapy<SUP> </SUP>regulations; Dr. Judith Epstein of the Naval Medical Research<SUP> </SUP>Center for manuscript review; and Merissa Henry of Protein Potential<SUP> </SUP>LLC for editorial assistance.<SUP> </SUP>
    Potential Financial Conflicts of Interest: None disclosed.<SUP> </SUP>Requests for Single Reprints: Stephen L. Hoffman, MD, Protein<SUP> </SUP>Potential LLC, 12111 Parklawn Drive, Rockville, MD 20852; e-mail,<SUP> </SUP>slhoffman@protpot.com<SCRIPT type=text/javascript><!-- var u = "slhoffman", d = "protpot.com"; document.getElementById("em0").innerHTML = '<a href="mailto:' + u + '@' + d + '">' + u + '@' + d + '<\/a>'//--></SCRIPT> .<SUP> </SUP>

    Comment


    • #3
      The complete original article

      Here is the complete article for thoses interested


      __________________________________________________ _____________________
      REVIEW

      Meta-Analysis: Convalescent Blood Products for Spanish Influenza Pneumonia: A Future H5N1 Treatment?

      </NOBR><NOBR>Thomas C. Luke, MD, MTMH</NOBR>; <NOBR>Edward M. Kilbane, MD, MPH</NOBR>; <NOBR>Jeffrey L. Jackson, MD, MPH</NOBR>; and <NOBR>Stephen L. Hoffman, MD, DTMH</NOBR>

      17 October 2006 | Volume 145 Issue 8

      Background: Studies from the Spanish influenza era reported<SUP> </SUP>that transfusion of influenza-convalescent human blood products<SUP> </SUP>reduced mortality in patients with influenza complicated by<SUP> </SUP>pneumonia. Treatments for H5N1 influenza are unsatisfactory,<SUP> </SUP>and convalescent human plasma containing H5N1 antibodies could<SUP> </SUP>be an effective therapy during outbreaks and pandemics.<SUP> </SUP>
      Purpose: To see whether transfusion with influenza-convalescent<SUP> </SUP>human blood products reduced the risk for death in patients<SUP> </SUP>with Spanish influenza pneumonia.<SUP> </SUP>
      Data Sources: Manual search of English-language journals from<SUP> </SUP>1918 to 1925. Citations from retrieved studies were also searched.<SUP> </SUP>
      Study Selection: Published English-language studies that had<SUP> </SUP>at least 10 patients in the treatment group, used convalescent<SUP> </SUP>blood products to treat Spanish influenza pneumonia in a hospital<SUP> </SUP>setting, and reported on a control or comparison group.<SUP> </SUP>
      Data Extraction: Two investigators independently extracted<SUP> </SUP>data on study characteristics, outcomes, adverse events, and<SUP> </SUP>quality.<SUP> </SUP>
      Data Synthesis: Eight relevant studies involving 1703 patients<SUP> </SUP>were found. Treated patients, who were often selected because<SUP> </SUP>of more severe illness, were compared with untreated controls<SUP> </SUP>with influenza pneumonia in the same hospital or ward. The overall<SUP> </SUP>crude case-fatality rate was 16% (54 of 336) among treated patients<SUP> </SUP>and 37% (452 of 1219) among controls. The range of absolute<SUP> </SUP>risk differences in mortality between the treatment and control<SUP> </SUP>groups was 8% to 26% (pooled risk difference, 21% [95% CI, 15%<SUP> </SUP>to 27%]). The overall crude case-fatality rate was 19% (28 of<SUP> </SUP>148) among patients who received early treatment (after <4<SUP> </SUP>days of pneumonia complications) and 59% (49 of 83) among patients<SUP> </SUP>who received late treatment (after 4 days of pneumonia complications).<SUP> </SUP>The range of absolute risk differences in mortality between<SUP> </SUP>the early treatment group and the late treatment group was 26%<SUP> </SUP>to 50% (pooled risk difference, 41% [CI, 29% to 54%]). Adverse<SUP> </SUP>effects included chill reactions and possible exacerbations<SUP> </SUP>of symptoms in a few patients.<SUP> </SUP>
      Limitations: Studies were few and had many methodologic limitations.<SUP> </SUP>No study was a blinded, randomized, or placebo-controlled trial.<SUP> </SUP>Some pertinent studies may have been missed.<SUP> </SUP>
      Conclusions: Patients with Spanish influenza pneumonia who<SUP> </SUP>received influenza-convalescent human blood products may have<SUP> </SUP>experienced a clinically important reduction in the risk for<SUP> </SUP>death. Convalescent human H5N1 plasma could be an effective,<SUP> </SUP>timely, and widely available treatment that should be studied<SUP> </SUP>in clinical trials.<SUP> </SUP>

      <TABLE cellPadding=10 border=1><TBODY><TR bgColor=#f5f5f5><TD><!-- null -->
      <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TH vAlign=center align=left width="95%">Editors' Notes <TABLE height=1 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width="100%" bgColor=#009982 height=1></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TH></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellPadding=5 align=right><TBODY><TR><TH align=left>Top
      Editors' Notes
      Methods
      Results
      Discussion
      Author & Article Info
      References
      </TH></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
      Context
      • Studies of Spanish influenza that evaluated effects<SUP> </SUP>of transfusion with influenza-convalescent blood products might<SUP> </SUP>offer insights regarding potential treatments for H5N1 influenza.

      Contribution
      • This<SUP> </SUP>review of 8 controlled studies published in English-language<SUP> </SUP>medical literature between 1918 to 1925 found that transfusion<SUP> </SUP>with influenza-convalescent human blood products may have reduced<SUP> </SUP>risk for death in hospitalized patients with Spanish influenza<SUP> </SUP>complicated by pneumonia. Transfusions caused some chill reactions.

      Cautions
      • Studies<SUP> </SUP>had many methodologic limitations.

      Implications
      • Studies<SUP> </SUP>from the Spanish influenza era support the idea that convalescent<SUP> </SUP>human H5N1 plasma could be an effective, accessible treatment<SUP> </SUP>that should be studied in clinical trials.

      ?The Editors

      </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
      <SUP></SUP>
      The world is bracing for a potential H5N1 influenza pandemic.<SUP> </SUP>During the Spanish influenza pandemic, an estimated 30% of the<SUP> </SUP>world's population became ill and 50 million people died (1).<SUP> </SUP>An H5N1 influenza pandemic could be equally or more severe.<SUP> </SUP>Unfortunately, effective vaccines will be difficult to produce<SUP> </SUP>before a novel human pandemic strain emerges and will take substantial<SUP> </SUP>time to manufacture and distribute in quantity. It is sobering<SUP> </SUP>that the world's annual production capacity for influenza vaccine<SUP> </SUP>is 300 million doses (2)?enough for 4.5% of the world's<SUP> </SUP>population. These facts have caused some governments to develop<SUP> </SUP>response plans to pandemic influenza that involve creating antiviral<SUP> </SUP>stockpiles and increasing the capacity to handle surges in the<SUP> </SUP>need for medical care.<SUP> </SUP>
      Patients with H5N1 influenza often develop a fatal case of acute<SUP> </SUP>respiratory distress syndrome or multiple organ dysfunction<SUP> </SUP>syndrome that is similar to the syndromes reported in patients<SUP> </SUP>with Spanish influenza who developed pneumonia-like complications<SUP> </SUP>(3?5). To treat patients with H5N1 influenza, the World<SUP> </SUP>Health Organization recommends hospitalization with early use<SUP> </SUP>of oseltamivir and supportive care (3). Despite these treatments,<SUP> </SUP>30% to 80% of hospitalized patients with H5N1 influenza have<SUP> </SUP>died, and an oseltamivir-resistant virus has developed in some<SUP> </SUP>patients (3, 4). A case series report of Vietnamese patients<SUP> </SUP>with H5N1 influenza suggested that "supportive care may be the<SUP> </SUP>only option available" (4). Even if more effective standard<SUP> </SUP>pharmaceutical treatments are produced, it is unlikely that<SUP> </SUP>sufficient quantities will be rapidly or widely available because<SUP> </SUP>of financial, logistical, and health care delivery limitations.<SUP> </SUP>
      Passively delivered anti-influenza antibodies in convalescent<SUP> </SUP>human plasma obtained from H5N1 survivors may offer a novel<SUP> </SUP>treatment approach and possible solution to these problems.<SUP> </SUP>Passive antibodies have been used to prevent and treat such<SUP> </SUP>diseases as rabies, measles, hepatitis B, cytomegalovirus, and<SUP> </SUP>respiratory syncytial virus (6), and convalescent human plasma<SUP> </SUP>may have efficacy in the treatment of severe acute respiratory<SUP> </SUP>syndrome (7, 8). The modern plasmapheresis systems in many hospitals<SUP> </SUP>and blood collection centers currently produce large volumes<SUP> </SUP>of plasma for treating coagulopathies and other conditions (9, 10).<SUP> </SUP>The same infrastructure, personnel, and regulatory framework<SUP> </SUP>could produce convalescent plasma for the treatment of H5N1<SUP> </SUP>influenza. To help assess the potential treatment efficacy of<SUP> </SUP>convalescent plasma in reducing mortality in current patients<SUP> </SUP>with H5N1 influenza, we conducted a review of studies from the<SUP> </SUP>Spanish influenza era that used influenza-convalescent human<SUP> </SUP>blood products to treat patients with Spanish influenza complicated<SUP> </SUP>by pneumonia ("influenza pneumonia").<SUP> </SUP>
      <!-- null -->
      <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TH vAlign=center align=left width="95%">Methods <TABLE height=1 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width="100%" bgColor=#009982 height=1></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TH></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellPadding=5 align=right><TBODY><TR><TH align=left>Top
      Editors' Notes
      Methods
      Results
      Discussion
      Author & Article Info
      References
      </TH></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
      Data Sources and Searches
      We developed and followed a protocol for the literature review<SUP> </SUP>and also followed standard reporting guidelines (11). The medical<SUP> </SUP>literature during the 1920s was not centrally indexed in an<SUP> </SUP>electronic or text database. Two authors first conducted a preliminary<SUP> </SUP>survey and study of the original medical literature published<SUP> </SUP>about Spanish influenza. This was done to gain an understanding<SUP> </SUP>of the scientific concepts, research methods, medical practices,<SUP> </SUP>and vocabulary used during that era to aid in the development<SUP> </SUP>of our review and search strategy. Subsequently, 1 author conducted<SUP> </SUP>a manual review of the indexes of the following medical journals<SUP> </SUP>from 1918 to 1925: Journal of the American Medical Association,<SUP> </SUP>Boston Medical and Surgical Journal (now New England Journal<SUP> </SUP>of Medicine), British Medical Journal, Canadian Medical Association<SUP> </SUP>Journal, Lancet, Archives of Internal Medicine, The Military<SUP> </SUP>Surgeon (United States), and Naval Medical Bulletin (United<SUP> </SUP>States).<SUP> </SUP>
      We searched 3 terms in the journal indexes: influenza, serotherapy,<SUP> </SUP>and pneumonia. We then searched subindexes or article titles<SUP> </SUP>that were listed under the 3 categories for any of the following<SUP> </SUP>terms: influenza, serotherapy, pneumonia, serum, plasma, blood,<SUP> </SUP>bronchopneumonia, convalescent, intravenous, and transfusion.<SUP> </SUP>Potentially relevant articles were obtained and reviewed. We<SUP> </SUP>also reviewed references of relevant articles. Of note, many<SUP> </SUP>of the source journals provided an indexed abstract section<SUP> </SUP>of articles drawn from other English-language and non?English-language<SUP> </SUP>journals. Original articles on our topic were often published<SUP> </SUP>as an abstract by other journals, and the articles often cross-referenced<SUP> </SUP>each other. For practical reasons, including feasibility and<SUP> </SUP>resource constraints, we limited our searches to years in which<SUP> </SUP>relevant studies were likely to be published.<SUP> </SUP>
      Study Selection
      Two authors selected studies published in an English-language<SUP> </SUP>medical journal that met inclusion criteria defined a priori<SUP> </SUP>(Figure 1). Studies had to have used convalescent whole blood,<SUP> </SUP>plasma, or serum obtained from humans who had recovered from<SUP> </SUP>Spanish influenza as the treatment product and had to indicate<SUP> </SUP>the type, route, and volume of the product that was used. The<SUP> </SUP>treatment and control groups had to have included hospitalized<SUP> </SUP>patients with a diagnosis of influenza complicated by pneumonia,<SUP> </SUP>and investigators had to report mortality rates. The treatment<SUP> </SUP>group had to include at least 10 patients. The control group<SUP> </SUP>had to receive standard care and could not be assigned to receive,<SUP> </SUP>as a group, an alternative experimental therapy, such as an<SUP> </SUP>equine-derived antipneumococcus serum. Studies had to be conducted<SUP> </SUP>in a hospital setting during the Spanish influenza pandemic<SUP> </SUP>of 1918 to 1920. We excluded studies if they were reported only<SUP> </SUP>as an editorial, commentary, or abstract or as a translated<SUP> </SUP>synopsis of a non?English-language study.<SUP> </SUP>
      <!-- null -->
      Please click here to check whether you must obtain permission to reproduce this image.


      Figure 1. Flow diagram of trial identification and selection. *Most of these studies were excluded on the basis of multiple criteria.


      <SUP></SUP>
      Our rationale for the detailed inclusion and exclusion criteria<SUP> </SUP>was as follows. Hospitalized patients were likely to have had<SUP> </SUP>very severe illness and a more reliable diagnosis of influenza<SUP> </SUP>pneumonia than were patients whose illness was diagnosed and<SUP> </SUP>treated by general practitioners in the home. Although strains<SUP> </SUP>of Spanish influenza probably circulated before 1918 and certainly<SUP> </SUP>did so after 1920, the accuracy of a diagnosis of Spanish influenza<SUP> </SUP>pneumonia was likely to be reasonably good during years when<SUP> </SUP>herd immunity was low, the virus was virulent, and large epidemics<SUP> </SUP>occurred. Because scientific concepts, research methods, medical<SUP> </SUP>practices, and vocabulary have changed markedly since 1920,<SUP> </SUP>we restricted our analysis to articles that we could carefully<SUP> </SUP>scrutinize and for which we could reasonably reliably determine<SUP> </SUP>the primary clinical condition of patients, the treatment that<SUP> </SUP>was given, and characteristics of the treatment and control<SUP> </SUP>groups.<SUP> </SUP>
      Data Extraction and Quality Assessment
      Two authors independently extracted data about study characteristics,<SUP> </SUP>outcomes, adverse events, and quality. Disagreements were resolved<SUP> </SUP>by consensus. The quality of each study was assessed by using<SUP> </SUP>a 27-item checklist that was developed to assess the methodologic<SUP> </SUP>quality of randomized and nonrandomized studies of health care<SUP> </SUP>interventions (12). The quality scores could range from 0 to<SUP> </SUP>27, with higher scores indicating better quality.<SUP> </SUP>
      Data Synthesis and Analysis
      We used as the principal measure of effect the range of absolute<SUP> </SUP>risk differences in death between the treatment and control<SUP> </SUP>groups. We conducted a planned subgroup analysis of mortality<SUP> </SUP>among patients who received early treatment (after <4 days<SUP> </SUP>of illness) compared with those who received late treatment<SUP> </SUP>(after 4 days). We also calculated overall crude case-fatality<SUP> </SUP>rates and pooled absolute risk differences in death by using<SUP> </SUP>the random-effects model of DerSimonian and Laird (13). Heterogeneity<SUP> </SUP>was assessed visually by using Galbraith plots (14) and statistically<SUP> </SUP>by using the I<SUP>2</SUP> statistic (15). To exclude the possibility that<SUP> </SUP>any one study was excessively influencing the results, we conducted<SUP> </SUP>a sensitivity analysis by excluding each study one at a time.<SUP> </SUP>We used the method of Egger and colleagues (16) to assess for<SUP> </SUP>statistical evidence of possible publication bias. All analyses<SUP> </SUP>were performed by using Stata software, version 9.1 (Stata Corp.,<SUP> </SUP>College Station, Texas).<SUP> </SUP>
      Role of the Funding Source
      No funding was received for this review.<SUP> </SUP>
      <!-- null -->
      <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TH vAlign=center align=left width="95%">Results <TABLE height=1 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width="100%" bgColor=#009982 height=1></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TH></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellPadding=5 align=right><TBODY><TR><TH align=left>Top
      Editors' Notes
      Methods
      Results
      Discussion
      Author & Article Info
      References
      </TH></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
      Study Selection and Evaluation
      We searched hundreds of titles in the topic indexes and retrieved<SUP> </SUP>72 manuscripts for screening (Figure 1). Many of these studies<SUP> </SUP>focused on the isolation and identification of the "influenza"<SUP> </SUP>bacillus or known bacterial pathogens or used various animal-derived<SUP> </SUP>antipneumococcus serums or other preparations for treatment.<SUP> </SUP>In 27 reports, influenza-convalescent human blood products were<SUP> </SUP>used to treat patients with Spanish influenza, with or without<SUP> </SUP>pneumonia complications. Of these, 8 studies described in 10<SUP> </SUP>reports met all of our inclusion criteria (17?26). No<SUP> </SUP>included study was identified solely from the citation review.<SUP> </SUP>We excluded 17 articles that were small case reports, incomplete<SUP> </SUP>or noninterpretable, written in a non-English language, or involved<SUP> </SUP>only patients with uncomplicated influenza (27?43).<SUP> </SUP>
      Tables 1 and 2 show details from these studies, which ranged<SUP> </SUP>in size from 43 to 551 patients. The methodologic quality of<SUP> </SUP>the studies was poor, and the mean quality score was 11. No<SUP> </SUP>study was a randomized trial. Neither physicians nor patients<SUP> </SUP>were blinded to treatment status; placebo, sham, or alternative<SUP> </SUP>experimental treatments (such as equine-derived antipneumococcus<SUP> </SUP>serum) were not used in the control groups. Dosages, volumes,<SUP> </SUP>and administration schedules of convalescent blood products<SUP> </SUP>were not standardized. Patients were often selected for the<SUP> </SUP>treatment on the basis of a more serious clinical illness. Control<SUP> </SUP>groups were formed from all other patients with influenza pneumonia<SUP> </SUP>who were admitted to the same hospital or ward or were "matched"<SUP> </SUP>for similar or lesser clinical severity. "Standard care" that<SUP> </SUP>was delivered to controls was not clearly defined. Blood product<SUP> </SUP>donors were screened for recent influenza disease and had no<SUP> </SUP>history of syphilis and a negative result on a Wasserman test.<SUP> </SUP>Follow-up continued until death or discharge from the hospital,<SUP> </SUP>and no study reported that any patient was lost to follow-up.<SUP> </SUP>Deaths in treated patients were ascribed to late transfusion,<SUP> </SUP>the hopeless condition of some moribund patients when they first<SUP> </SUP>received transfusion, a preexisting medical condition, or development<SUP> </SUP>of a fatal secondary bacterial infection after full or partial<SUP> </SUP>recovery.<SUP> </SUP>
      Patients were primarily previously healthy adult men 17 to 45<SUP> </SUP>years of age. Diagnoses were made clinically, although chest<SUP> </SUP>radiography was occasionally used. Leukopenia was a common laboratory<SUP> </SUP>finding. The diagnosis of influenza complicated by pneumonia<SUP> </SUP>included 3 overlapping modern diagnostic entities: influenza<SUP> </SUP>pneumonia, the acute respiratory distress syndrome, and secondary<SUP> </SUP>bacterial pneumonia. The investigators were aware that they<SUP> </SUP>were treating virulent influenza with an unusual spectrum of<SUP> </SUP>pneumonic complications, but the exact cause and pathogenesis<SUP> </SUP>were unclear, because the influenza A virus was not discovered<SUP> </SUP>until 1931 and the acute respiratory distress syndrome was not<SUP> </SUP>a well-defined or recognized clinical entity in the early 20th<SUP> </SUP>century.<SUP> </SUP>
      Trials included in the subanalysis of early treatment versus<SUP> </SUP>late treatment ranged in size from 33 to 147 patients. Transfusion<SUP> </SUP>was not withheld in any study for the purpose of evaluating<SUP> </SUP>mortality among late-treated patients. Rather, late treatment<SUP> </SUP>was the result of delayed presentation by the patient or a shortage<SUP> </SUP>of blood products.<SUP> </SUP>
      Mortality Outcomes
      Six studies reported survival benefits with treatment (17?24).<SUP> </SUP>The overall crude case-fatality rate was 16% (54 of 336) among<SUP> </SUP>treated patients and 37% (452 of 1219) among controls. The range<SUP> </SUP>of absolute risk differences in death was 8% to 26% (pooled<SUP> </SUP>risk difference, 21% [95% CI, 15% to 27%]; Q = 7.0; I<SUP>2</SUP> =<SUP> </SUP>29.3%) between the treatment and control groups (Figure 2).<SUP> </SUP>We found no evidence of statistical heterogeneity (P =<SUP> </SUP>0.22) nor any statistical suggestion of possible publication<SUP> </SUP>bias (P = 0.25 [Egger test]). No individual study exerted<SUP> </SUP>an unusual or undue influence on our results.<SUP> </SUP>
      <!-- null -->
      Figure 2. Absolute risk differences in mortality among patients treated with convalescent blood products and controls. Results favor treatment with convalescent blood products, (z = 7.1; P < 0.001), and there was no statistical evidence of large heterogeneity (Q = 7.0; I<SUP>2</SUP> = 29.3%; P = 0.22). The pooled estimate should be interpreted with caution and should not be generalized to other strains of virulent influenza without further study. *In 2 studies with low mortality rates in the treatment group, the majority of patients were treated within 48 hours after pneumonia complicating influenza was diagnosed (18, 23, 24). McGuire and Redden (23, 24) reported a range of mortality rates of 30% to 60% among controls, and 30% was used in the analysis. Percentages have been rounded to the nearest whole integer.


      Four studies reported the time delay between presentation with<SUP> </SUP>pneumonia complications and initiation of treatment (17, 19, 20, 25, 26).<SUP> </SUP>All 4 studies that compared early versus late treatment reported<SUP> </SUP>survival benefit with early treatment. The overall crude case-fatality<SUP> </SUP>rate was 19% (28 of 148) for patients treated within 4 days<SUP> </SUP>of pneumonia complications and 59% (49 of 83) for patients treated<SUP> </SUP>at 4 days or later. The range of absolute risk difference in<SUP> </SUP>death was 26% to 50% (pooled risk difference, 41% [CI, 29% to<SUP> </SUP>54%]; Q = 2.76; I<SUP>2</SUP> = 0%) between patients treated<SUP> </SUP>early and patients treated late (Figure 3). There was no evidence<SUP> </SUP>of statistical heterogeneity (P = 0.43) nor any statistical<SUP> </SUP>suggestion of possible publication bias (P = 0.23 [Egger<SUP> </SUP>test]). No individual study exerted an unusual or undue influence<SUP> </SUP>on our results.<SUP> </SUP>
      <!-- null -->
      <CENTER>
      Figure 3. Absolute risk difference in mortality among patients who received early versus late treatment with convalescent blood products. Results favor treatment with convalescent blood products (z = 6.50; P < 0.001), and there was no statistical evidence of heterogeneity (Q = 2.76; I<SUP>2</SUP> = 0%; P = 0.43). The pooled estimate should be interpreted with caution and should not be generalized to other strains of virulent influenza without further study. *The treatment day of a fatal case could not be determined and was excluded from analysis of early versus late treatment (19, 20). Percentages have been rounded to the nearest whole integer.

      <SUP></SUP></CENTER>
      Only 2 trials (17, 19, 20) reported sufficient data to compare<SUP> </SUP>both early and late treatment groups with a control group. The<SUP> </SUP>mortality rates among patients treated within 4 days compared<SUP> </SUP>with controls were 32% (10 of 31) versus 53% (201 of 379) (17)<SUP> </SUP>and 14% (3 of 22) versus 43% (9 of 21) (19, 20). The mortality<SUP> </SUP>rates among patients treated on or after the fourth day compared<SUP> </SUP>with controls were 60% (15 of 25) versus 53% (201 of 379) (17)<SUP> </SUP>and 40% (2 of 5) versus 43% (9 of 21) (19, 20).<SUP> </SUP>
      Adverse Events
      Seven studies provided information on transfusion-related adverse<SUP> </SUP>events (17?20, 22?26) (Table 1). One study did not<SUP> </SUP>provide information on adverse events (21). The most commonly<SUP> </SUP>reported mild adverse event was a brief "chill" reaction with<SUP> </SUP>a transient elevation in body temperature by 1 to 2 ?F<SUP> </SUP>30 to 120 minutes after the transfusion. The rates of the chill<SUP> </SUP>reaction were reported as 16% (17), 75% (18), or 10% (25) of<SUP> </SUP>patients, or that the occurrence of this event was "frequent"<SUP> </SUP>(19, 20) or "infrequent" (23, 24), or seen in "some" patients<SUP> </SUP>(26). The different rates of this minor transfusion-like reaction<SUP> </SUP>may be due to the variable reactogenicity of the blood product<SUP> </SUP>used (serum, plasma, or whole blood). One study reported that<SUP> </SUP>transfusions had no "untoward" effects (22). Five studies reported<SUP> </SUP>moderate to severe transfusion-related adverse events. Three<SUP> </SUP>studies reported that serious exacerbations of symptoms soon<SUP> </SUP>after transfusion could have "hastened death" in 4 seriously<SUP> </SUP>ill patients (17), "may" have occurred in some terminally ill<SUP> </SUP>patients (18), and could ["can"] have occurred in critically<SUP> </SUP>ill patients if the infusion was too rapid (24). One study reported<SUP> </SUP>a case of "anticipated anaphylaxis" after transfusion with non?ABO-matched<SUP> </SUP>blood, which was administered because no matched donor was available<SUP> </SUP>and the patient's condition was critical (the patient survived)<SUP> </SUP>(19, 20). Two studies each reported a case of hyperpyrexia to<SUP> </SUP>107 ?F shortly after transfusion (17, 19, 20). One<SUP> </SUP>study reported a case of phlebitis and generalized jaundice<SUP> </SUP>(23, 24). The overall rate of moderate to serious transfusion-related<SUP> </SUP>adverse events from studies (17, 19, 20, 23, 24) that provided<SUP> </SUP>quantifiable data was 4% (9 of 235 patients). Fatal and nonfatal<SUP> </SUP>adverse events related to underlying disease were reported in<SUP> </SUP>the treatment and control groups and included secondary bacterial<SUP> </SUP>pleurisies, empyemas, pneumonias (commonly hemolytic streptococcus),<SUP> </SUP>septicemia, meningitis, and undifferentiated delirium and psychosis.<SUP> </SUP>
      Other Outcomes
      All 8 studies reported a clinical judgment that a distinct and<SUP> </SUP>beneficial improvement often occurred in treated patients after<SUP> </SUP>transfusion (Table 1). The improvement was characterized by<SUP> </SUP>reductions in cyanosis, respiratory rate, nausea, vomiting,<SUP> </SUP>fever, malaise, or delirium within 2 to 24 hours after 1 or<SUP> </SUP>2 transfusions. Distinct improvements were generally noted in<SUP> </SUP>patients who received early treatment but also occurred in some<SUP> </SUP>patients who received late treatment. One of the studies (17)<SUP> </SUP>reported that patients who received early treatment had a beneficial<SUP> </SUP>post-transfusion response (23 of 32 [72%]), whereas those who<SUP> </SUP>received late treatment (4 of 24 [17%]) or "normal" serum (5<SUP> </SUP>of 28 [18%]) did not (Table 2). One study (19, 20) reported<SUP> </SUP>that 28 patients in the treatment group had more rapid resolution<SUP> </SUP>of fever (average duration, 9.5 days) and an increase in leukocyte<SUP> </SUP>count (average increase 3 days after transfusion, 7000 cells/mL)<SUP> </SUP>compared with 21 controls (average duration of fever, 15 days;<SUP> </SUP>no change in leukocyte count) (Table 2). In 1 study (23, 24),<SUP> </SUP>8 patients with uncomplicated influenza were randomly allocated<SUP> </SUP>to receive influenza-convalescent serum (3 patients) or "normal"<SUP> </SUP>serum (5 patients) (Table 2). Twenty-four hours after transfusion,<SUP> </SUP>the 3 patients who received influenza-convalescent serum were<SUP> </SUP>afebrile, whereas the 5 patients who received normal serum had<SUP> </SUP>the same or higher body temperature. The 5 patients who received<SUP> </SUP>normal serum then received influenza-convalescent serum and<SUP> </SUP>were afebrile in 24 hours.<SUP> </SUP>
      Data from Excluded Studies
      Most excluded studies (Appendix Table) reported that use of<SUP> </SUP>influenza-convalescent blood products was beneficial (27?29,<SUP> </SUP>32?43). One large study at a U.S. Army recruit training<SUP> </SUP>hospital investigated the use of influenza-convalescent serum<SUP> </SUP>in patients with Spanish influenza but not pneumonia (27). The<SUP> </SUP>treatment group consisted of 26 patients with influenza who<SUP> </SUP>were selected on the basis of highest fever and clinical severity<SUP> </SUP>of illness and were compared with a control group of 219 concurrent<SUP> </SUP>patients with uncomplicated influenza. Compared with controls,<SUP> </SUP>treated patients had faster resolution of fever (average, 3.6<SUP> </SUP>days vs. 5.8 days), fewer cases of pneumonia (1 of 26 treated<SUP> </SUP>patients [4%] vs. 30 of 219 controls [13.7%]), and fewer deaths<SUP> </SUP>(0 of 26 patients vs. 6 of 219 patients [3%]). In a published<SUP> </SUP>discussion forum, 2 commentators purported that this treatment<SUP> </SUP>approach was not beneficial on the basis of their experience<SUP> </SUP>(30, 31). It was unclear whether these commentators were treating<SUP> </SUP>bacterial pneumonia or influenza pneumonia, and their commentaries<SUP> </SUP>lacked a complete description of important factors.<SUP> </SUP>
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      <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TH vAlign=center align=left width="95%">Discussion <TABLE height=1 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width="100%" bgColor=#009982 height=1></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TH></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellPadding=5 align=right><TBODY><TR><TH align=left>Top
      Editors' Notes
      Methods
      Results
      Discussion
      Author & Article Info
      References
      </TH></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
      Our analysis suggests that patients with Spanish influenza pneumonia<SUP> </SUP>who received transfusion with influenza-convalescent human blood<SUP> </SUP>products may have experienced a clinically important reduction<SUP> </SUP>in the risk for death and improvements in clinical signs and<SUP> </SUP>symptoms. Adverse effects included chill reactions and possible<SUP> </SUP>exacerbations of symptoms in a few seriously ill patients. Our<SUP> </SUP>subanalysis indicates that early treatment (after <4 days<SUP> </SUP>of pneumonia complications) was superior to late treatment (after<SUP> </SUP>4 days of pneumonia complications). The mortality rate among<SUP> </SUP>controls and late-treated patients appeared similar and is consistent<SUP> </SUP>with the modern recognition that early definitive therapy for<SUP> </SUP>pneumonia and hypoxia is clinically important. Although we calculated<SUP> </SUP>a pooled estimate of possible effect, we urge caution in the<SUP> </SUP>interpretation of the summary estimate and do not think that<SUP> </SUP>it should be generalized to other virulent influenza strains<SUP> </SUP>without further study.<SUP> </SUP>
      Our biological hypothesis for why mortality and morbidity may<SUP> </SUP>have been reduced is that the virus was neutralized by anti-influenza<SUP> </SUP>antibodies in the blood product. Rapid viral clearance would<SUP> </SUP>halt further replication and the stimulus for the cytokine cascade<SUP> </SUP>that is responsible for the acute respiratory distress syndrome.<SUP> </SUP>Reductions in the mortality rate may have also resulted from<SUP> </SUP>fewer secondary cases of bacterial pneumonia, empyema, and septicemia.<SUP> </SUP>Several human and animal studies (44?58) have reported<SUP> </SUP>protection with use of passively acquired anti-influenza antibodies<SUP> </SUP>and provide support for this hypothesis. Successful treatment<SUP> </SUP>of a pulmonary influenza virus infection in severe combined<SUP> </SUP>immunodeficiency mice with hemagglutinin-specific antibodies<SUP> </SUP>with very low virus-neutralizing activity in vitro (51) and<SUP> </SUP>in H5N1-infected mice with equine-derived H5N1 F(ab) fragments<SUP> </SUP>(52) provides direct evidence that anti-influenza antibodies<SUP> </SUP>are therapeutic in a model of severe disease.<SUP> </SUP>
      Our findings are provocative, but our review has important limitations.<SUP> </SUP>Studies were few, and the size of most was small. The medical<SUP> </SUP>and research practices of the 1920s are archaic by current standards.<SUP> </SUP>None of the studies was a blinded, randomized, or placebo-controlled<SUP> </SUP>trial. Treated patients were often selected on the basis of<SUP> </SUP>having more severe illness, and treatment regimens were not<SUP> </SUP>standardized. Although the Egger test did not detect statistical<SUP> </SUP>evidence of possible publication bias, this test is not a foolproof<SUP> </SUP>measure of publication bias, particularly when few studies are<SUP> </SUP>found. Moreover, we could not acquire and analyze every study.<SUP> </SUP>World War I coincided with the most intense waves of the Spanish<SUP> </SUP>influenza pandemic, and wartime censorship, death, or illness<SUP> </SUP>of investigators and rapid demobilization of drafted physicians<SUP> </SUP>may have prevented the publication of negative (or positive)<SUP> </SUP>studies. Therefore, publication bias may be present. Although<SUP> </SUP>survival or death while under direct observation for this acute<SUP> </SUP>and highly fatal disease is an easily determined dichotomous<SUP> </SUP>outcome that is resistant to misclassification, bias is always<SUP> </SUP>a concern in studies that are not randomized or blinded. For<SUP> </SUP>these reasons, we cannot establish a definitive judgment regarding<SUP> </SUP>the efficacy of this form of therapy for Spanish influenza and<SUP> </SUP>other virulent avian-like influenza strains (59).<SUP> </SUP>
      However, current treatment options for H5N1 patients are unsatisfactory.<SUP> </SUP>In the event of a severe pandemic, antiviral agents, antibiotics,<SUP> </SUP>and intensive care medicine may be rationed or not available<SUP> </SUP>to most severely ill patients. Modern plasmatherapy may be an<SUP> </SUP>effective and practical health care delivery alternative. Large<SUP> </SUP>volumes of plasma are currently produced by existing hospital-based<SUP> </SUP>plasmapheresis and blood collection centers (60, 61), and U.S.<SUP> </SUP>Food and Drug Administration regulations (62) allow individuals<SUP> </SUP>to donate 1000 to 1200 mL of plasma per week. A single H5N1<SUP> </SUP>convalescent donor could provide a weekly volume of plasma sufficient<SUP> </SUP>to treat multiple patients with H5N1 influenza. Donation is<SUP> </SUP>safe and entails few adverse events because the cellular components<SUP> </SUP>of the blood are returned to the donor under sterile conditions,<SUP> </SUP>and risks should not increase for convalescent donors. Locally<SUP> </SUP>produced plasma from convalescent donors or early vaccine recipients<SUP> </SUP>could be immediately effective in the event of a virulent influenza<SUP> </SUP>epidemic or other disease for which no good treatment exists.<SUP> </SUP>Plasma could also be processed into a frozen plasma product<SUP> </SUP>or a hyperimmune -globulin product and shipped to other regions<SUP> </SUP>for use during outbreaks or pandemics.<SUP> </SUP>
      Current human H5N1 outbreaks are small, sporadic, and geographically<SUP> </SUP>distant. The comprehensive study of this treatment will probably<SUP> </SUP>require a global approach because a series of underpowered,<SUP> </SUP>nonstandardized, and nonrandomized case studies will not conclusively<SUP> </SUP>demonstrate or disprove efficacy. A central body of experts<SUP> </SUP>should be convened to consider H5N1 plasma therapy and to make<SUP> </SUP>recommendations regarding a research strategy and possibly treatment<SUP> </SUP>guidelines in the event that therapy is required before the<SUP> </SUP>research is completed. A standardized protocol could be created<SUP> </SUP>and then submitted by a consortium of international investigators<SUP> </SUP>to local or national investigational review boards. This effort<SUP> </SUP>would also aid in preparation of an application for an investigational<SUP> </SUP>new drug to such national regulatory agencies as the U.S. Food<SUP> </SUP>and Drug Administration. As a point of discussion, existing<SUP> </SUP>transfusion practices could be used to administer acute convalescent<SUP> </SUP>plasma to patients with H5N1 infection, in quantities of at<SUP> </SUP>least 1 to 2 mL/kg of body weight (9, 62). Larger treatment<SUP> </SUP>volumes may be necessary if the donor has been convalescent<SUP> </SUP>for a significant period owing to a reduced antibody titer.<SUP> </SUP>The information in Table 1 forms the basis for this interim<SUP> </SUP>recommendation. According to the investigators (17, 18, 21, 23?25),<SUP> </SUP>plasma from 3 or more donors may be more consistently potent.<SUP> </SUP>Studies in animal models infected with H5N1 and H1N1 Spanish<SUP> </SUP>influenza strains (59, 63) could provide additional information<SUP> </SUP>in advance of a completed human trial.<SUP> </SUP>
      In conclusion, patients with Spanish influenza pneumonia who<SUP> </SUP>received transfusion with influenza-convalescent human blood<SUP> </SUP>products may have experienced a clinically important reduction<SUP> </SUP>in the risk for death. Convalescent human H5N1 plasma could<SUP> </SUP>be an effective, timely, and widely available treatment for<SUP> </SUP>patients with H5N1 influenza during outbreaks and pandemics,<SUP> </SUP>and this therapy should be studied in clinical trials.<SUP> </SUP>
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      <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TH vAlign=center align=left width="95%">Author and Article Information <TABLE height=1 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width="100%" bgColor=#009982 height=1></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TH></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellPadding=5 align=right><TBODY><TR><TH align=left>Top
      Editors' Notes
      Methods
      Results
      Discussion
      Author & Article Info
      References
      </TH></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
      <!-- null -->From the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, U.S. Navy, Washington, DC; Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland; and Protein Potential LLC, Rockville Maryland.
      Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of<SUP> </SUP>the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy<SUP> </SUP>or position of the Department of the Navy, Department of the<SUP> </SUP>Army, Department of Defense, or the U.S. Government.<SUP> </SUP>
      Acknowledgments: The authors thank Jan K. Herman, PhD, and Andre<SUP> </SUP>B. Sobocinski of the U.S. Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery<SUP> </SUP>Historical Office for assistance with the search; Lieutenant<SUP> </SUP>Laura L. Jensen, USN, for translation of the Russian medical<SUP> </SUP>literature referenced in this article; Commander Steven E. Allen,<SUP> </SUP>USN, of the U.S. Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery Blood Program<SUP> </SUP>Office for assistance in blood component collection and therapy<SUP> </SUP>regulations; Dr. Judith Epstein of the Naval Medical Research<SUP> </SUP>Center for manuscript review; and Merissa Henry of Protein Potential<SUP> </SUP>LLC for editorial assistance.<SUP> </SUP>
      Potential Financial Conflicts of Interest: None disclosed.<SUP> </SUP>
      Requests for Single Reprints: Stephen L. Hoffman, MD, Protein<SUP> </SUP>Potential LLC, 12111 Parklawn Drive, Rockville, MD 20852; e-mail,<SUP> </SUP>slhoffman@protpot.com<SCRIPT type=text/javascript><!-- var u = "slhoffman", d = "protpot.com"; document.getElementById("em0").innerHTML = '<a href="mailto:' + u + '@' + d + '">' + u + '@' + d + '<\/a>'//--></SCRIPT> .<SUP> </SUP>
      Current Author Addresses: Drs. Luke and Kilbane: Public Health,<SUP> </SUP>Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, U.S. Navy, 2300 E Street NW,<SUP> </SUP>Washington, DC 20372-3000.<SUP> </SUP>
      Dr. Jackson: Department of Medicine, Uniformed Services University<SUP> </SUP>of the Health Sciences, 4301 Jones Bridge Road, Bethesda, MD<SUP> </SUP>20814.<SUP> </SUP>
      Dr. Hoffman: Protein Potential LLC, 12111 Parklawn Drive, Rockville,<SUP> </SUP>MD 20852.<SUP> </SUP>
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      <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TH vAlign=center align=left width="95%">References <TABLE height=1 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width="100%" bgColor=#009982 height=1></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TH></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellPadding=5 align=right><TBODY><TR><TH align=left>Top
      Editors' Notes
      Methods
      Results
      Discussion
      Author & Article Info
      References
      </TH></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
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