Passive Immunotherapy in AIDS: A Randomized Trial of Serial Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Positive Transfusions of Plasma Rich in p24 Antibodies versus Transfusions of Seronegative Plasma

1992 
To assess the place of passive immunotherapy in the treatment of AIDS, a randomized study was conducted that evaluated the safety and short-term efficacy of serial transfusions of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) seropositive plasma in 18 patients. Heat-inactivated anti-HIV antibody-rich plasma was compared with seronegative fresh-frozen seronegative plasma given in addition to zidovudine and other conventional prophylactic treatments. Seven transfusions every 2 weeks of immune plasma significantly reduced (2 vs. 8, P = .016) the number of opportunistic infections. Antigenemia became undetectable. When transfusions were stopped, positive p24 antigenemia returned at a level higher than before treatment and was correlated with a severe clinical deterioration, suggesting a rebound effect. This trial suggests that passive immunotherapy is promising in AIDS treatment. It confirms also that plasma donation does not affect donors' CD4 cell count over a 1-year period. In patients with severe immunodeficiency, special attention should be paid to withdrawal of an effective therapy as virologie relapse may be explosive and poorly tolerated.
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