Design and analysis considerations in the Ebola_Tx trial evaluating convalescent plasma in the treatment of Ebola virus disease in Guinea during the 2014-2015 outbreak

Tansy Edwards, Malcolm G Semple, Anja De Weggheleire, Yves Claeys, Maaike De Crop, Joris Menten, Raffaella Ravinetto, Sarah Temmerman, Lutgarde Lynen, Elhadj Ibrahima Bah, Peter G Smith, Johan van Griensven, Ebola_Tx Consortium, Tansy Edwards, Malcolm G Semple, Anja De Weggheleire, Yves Claeys, Maaike De Crop, Joris Menten, Raffaella Ravinetto, Sarah Temmerman, Lutgarde Lynen, Elhadj Ibrahima Bah, Peter G Smith, Johan van Griensven, Ebola_Tx Consortium

Abstract

The Ebola virus disease outbreak in 2014-2015 led to a huge caseload with a high case fatality rate. No specific treatments were available beyond supportive care for conditions such as dehydration and shock. Evaluation of treatment with convalescent plasma from Ebola survivors was identified as a priority. We evaluated this intervention in an emergency setting, where randomization was unacceptable. The original trial design was an open-label study comparing patients receiving convalescent plasma and supportive care to patients receiving supportive care alone. The comparison group comprised patients recruited at the start of the trial before convalescent plasma became available, as well as patients presenting during the trial for whom there was insufficient blood group-compatible plasma or no staffing capacity to provide additional transfusions. However, during the trial, convalescent plasma was available to treat all new patients. The design was changed to use a comparator group comprising patients previously treated at the same Ebola treatment center prior to the start of the trial. In the analysis, it was planned to adjust for any differences in prognostic variables between intervention and comparison groups, specifically baseline polymerase chain reaction cycle threshold and age. In addition, adjustment was planned for other potential confounders, identified in the analysis, such as patient presenting symptoms and time to treatment seeking. Because plasma treatment started up to 3 days after diagnosis and we could not define a similar time-point for the comparator group, patients who died before the third day after confirmation of diagnosis were excluded from both intervention and comparison groups in a per-protocol analysis. Some patients received additional experimental treatments soon after plasma treatment, and these were excluded. We also analyzed mortality including all patients from the time of confirmed diagnosis, irrespective of whether those in the trial series actually received plasma, as an intention-to-treat analysis. Per-protocol and intention-to-treat approaches gave similar conclusions. An important caveat in the interpretation of the findings is that it is unlikely that all potential sources of confounding, such as any variation in supportive care over time, were eliminated. Protocols and electronic data capture systems have now been extensively field-tested for emergency evaluation of treatment with convalescent plasma. Ongoing studies seek to quantify the level of neutralizing antibodies in different plasma donations to determine whether this influences the response and survival of treated patients.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02342171.

Keywords: Ebola; Guinea; convalescent plasma; trial design.

Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of conflicting interests: The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.

© The Author(s) 2016.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
(a) Planned non-randomized design: starting recruitment under the planned non-randomized design was on consideration of adequate plasma becoming available with minimal delay. (b) Implemented design: trial recruitment started once a minimum stock of plasma was available.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Screening and application of the exclusion criterion of deaths up to 2 days after confirmation of Ebola virus disease diagnosis.

References

    1. Casadevall A, Dadachova E, Pirofski LA. Passive antibody therapy for infectious diseases. Nat Rev Microbiol 2004; 2: 695–703.
    1. Mair-Jenkins J, Saavedra-Campos M, Baillie JK, et al. The effectiveness of convalescent plasma and hyperimmune immunoglobulin for the treatment of severe acute respiratory infections of viral etiology: a systematic review and exploratory meta-analysis. J Infect Dis 2015; 211: 80–90.
    1. Mupapa K, Massamba M, Kibadi K, et al. Treatment of Ebola hemorrhagic fever with blood transfusions from convalescent patients. J Infect Dis 1999; 179: S18–S23.
    1. Gulland A. First Ebola treatment is approved by WHO. BMJ 2014; 349: g5539.
    1. Maurice J. WHO meeting chooses untried interventions to defeat Ebola. Lancet 2014; 384: e45–e46.
    1. Gutfraind A, Meyers LA. Evaluating large-scale blood transfusion therapy for the current Ebola epidemic in Liberia. J Infect Dis 2015; 211: 1262–1267.
    1. Colebunders RL, Cannon RO. Large-scale convalescent blood and plasma transfusion therapy for Ebola virus disease. J Infect Dis 2015; 211: 1208–1210.
    1. WHO Ebola Response Team. Ebola virus disease in West Africa—the first 9 months of the epidemic and forward projections. N Engl J Med 2014; 371: 1481–1495.
    1. Delamou A, Beavogui AH, Kondé MK, et al. Ebola: better protection needed for Guinean health-care workers. Lancet 2015; 385: 503–504.
    1. World Health Organization (WHO). Ebola response roadmap update, (2014, accessed 11 November 2015).
    1. World Health Organization. Ethical issues related to study design for trials on therapeutics for Ebola Virus Disease. In: WHO ethics working group meeting (summary of discussion), 20–21 October 2014, (accessed 5 November 2015).
    1. World Health Organization. Use of convalescent whole blood or plasma collected from patients recovered from Ebola virus disease for transfusion, as an empirical treatment during outbreaks. Interim Guidance for National Health Authorities and Blood Transfusion Services, (2014, accessed 5 November 2015).
    1. Bannister-Tyrrell M, Gryseels C, Delamou A, et al. Blood as medicine: social meanings of blood and the success of Ebola trials. Lancet 2015; 385: 420.
    1. Van Griensven J, De Weiggheleire A, Delamou A, et al. The use of Ebola convalescent plasma to treat Ebola virus disease in resource constrained settings: a perspective from the field. Clin Infect Dis. Epub ahead of print 10 August 2015. DOI: 10.1093/cid/civ680.
    1. Grietens KP, Ribera JM, Erhart A, et al. Doctors and vampires in Sub-Saharan Africa: ethical challenges in clinical trial research. Am J Trop Med Hyg 2014; 91: 213–215.
    1. Adebamowo C, Bah-Sow O, Binka F, et al. Randomised controlled trials for Ebola: practical and ethical issues. Lancet 2014; 384: 1423–1424.
    1. Proschan MA, Dodd LE, Price D. Statistical considerations for a trial of Ebola virus disease therapeutics. Clin Trials 2016; 13: 39–48.
    1. Claeys Y, Custers A, Michiels M, et al. Data collection in a high-risk infectious zone: challenges and lessons learned in an Ebola clinical trial in Conakry, Guinea. In: Abstracts of the 9th European congress on tropical medicine and international health, Basel, 6–10 September 2015 (also published in Trop Med Int Health 2015; 20(Suppl 1): 1–441; Abstract no. O.5.6.2.003, p. 135).
    1. Hunt L, Gupta-Wright A, Simms V, et al. Clinical presentation, biochemical, and haematological parameters and their association with outcome in patients with Ebola virus disease: an observational cohort study. Lancet Infect Dis 2015; 15: 1292–1299.
    1. Schieffelin JS, Jacob ST. Raising the standard for clinical care of patients with Ebola virus disease. Lancet Infect Dis 2015; 15: 1247–1248.

Source: PubMed

3
Se inscrever