Sindh reported its first successful recovery from passive immunisation therapy of a coronavirus patient on Sunday.
“The first patient to recover from the coronavirus with the use of passive immunisation therapy has been sent home,” the head of the National Institute of Blood Disease and Bone Marrow Transplantation (NIBD & BMT) and hematologist, Dr Tahir Shamsi, said.
Explaining the process, Dr Shamsi explained that the patient was administered plasma on April 30 and he completely recovered on May 8. The patient’s second test of COVID-19 has also come out negative.
More than 12 patients are currently being treated by the use of passive immunisation therapy, said the hematologist.
Under the supervised of senior hematologist, Dr Shamsi, the technique is set to be presented to other provinces for approval before a detailed strategy could be implemented in the hospitals across Pakistan. Sindh government had given permission for the use of passive immunisation therapy to treat coronavirus patients across the province on March 31.
“Under this technique, blood plasma from a healthy person is extracted and injected into the blood of a patient suffering from the coronavirus,” the hematologist had said. “After the transfer, the injected plasma generates anti-bodies in the immune system of the patient suffering from the coronavirus. These anti-bodies eventually fight off the virus,” he had added.
At present, there are no vaccines or proven therapies for the novel virus, which has already affected more than four million people across the globe.According to health experts, passive immunisation therapy is used either when there is a high risk of infection and insufficient time for the body to develop its own immune response or to reduce the symptoms of ongoing diseases.
On April 2, Pakistani coronavirus survivor Yahya Jafri, a resident of Karachi who had returned form pilgrimage in Iran, donated his plasma to doctors to help them fight the novel infection. “This virus will become history and our efforts will be remembered,” Jafri had said while addressing a press conference alongside hematologist Dr Saqib Ansari.
Dr Ansari had told the media that Jafri was diagnosed with the coronavirus last month and had donated his plasma after recovering from the infection so that others could be cured. Jafri had noted that he was ready to help his country in any way and was grateful for his recovery from the illness.
The government of Sindh had on April 30 approved further enhancement of the passive immunisation treatment for the novel coronavirus, adding that two more hospitals apart from the NIBD — including Dr Ruth K. M. Pfau Civil Hospital Karachi and Liaquat University of Medical & Health Sciences (LUMHS) Hospital in Hyderabad — would work on it.
According to a notification from the Sindh Health Department, a four-member team of experts was to lead the effort in the medical facilities.
“We have to stop the spread, [carry out] treatment, and [end] panic in the society,” Dr Ansari said. “The FDA will use the plasma to create anti-bodies,” the hematologist added, clarifying, however, that not every COVID-19 patient required plasma. He had added that the machine used to treat dengue virus patients also worked on those suffering from the coronavirus.