Successful Clearance of 300 Day Sars-Cov-2 Infection in a Subject With B-Cell Depletion Associated Prolonged (B-Deap) Covid by Regen-Cov Anti-Spike Monoclonal Antibody Cocktail

Arnaud C. Drouin, Tulane University School of Medicine
Marc W. Theberge, Tulane University
Sharon Y. Liu, Tulane University School of Medicine
Allison R. Smither, Tulane University School of Medicine
Shelby M. Flaherty, Tulane University School of Medicine
Mark Zeller, Scripps Research Institute
Gregory P. Geba, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Peter Reynaud, Tulane University School of Medicine
W. Benjamin Rothwell, Tulane University School of Medicine
Alfred P. Luk, Tulane University School of Medicine
Di Tian, Tulane University School of Medicine
Matthew L. Boisen, Zalgen Labs
Luis M. Branco, Zalgen Labs
Kristian G. Andersen, Scripps Research Institute
James E. Robinson, LSU Health Sciences Center- New Orleans
Robert F. Garry, Tulane University School of Medicine
Dahlene N. Fusco, Tulane University School of Medicine

Abstract

A 59-year-old male with follicular lymphoma treated by anti-CD20-mediated B-cell depletion and ablative chemotherapy was hospitalized with a COVID-19 infection. Although the patient did not develop specific humoral immunity, he had a mild clinical course overall. The failure of all therapeutic options allowed infection to persist nearly 300 days with active accumulation of SARS-CoV-2 virus mutations. As a rescue therapy, an infusion of REGEN-COV (10933 and 10987) anti-spike monoclonal antibodies was performed 270 days from initial diagnosis. Due to partial clearance after the first dose (2.4 g), a consolidation dose (8 g) was infused six weeks later. Complete virus clearance could then be observed over the following month, after he was vaccinated with the Pfizer-BioNTech anti-COVID-19 vaccination. The successful management of this patient required prolonged enhanced quarantine, monitoring of virus mutations, pioneering clinical decisions based upon close consultation, and the coordination of multidisciplinary experts in virology, immunology, pharmacology, input from REGN, the FDA, the IRB, the health care team, the patient, and the pa-tient’s family. Current decisions to take revolve around patient’s follicular lymphoma management, and monitoring for virus clearance persistence beyond disappearance of REGEN-COV monoclonal antibodies after anti-SARS-CoV-2 vaccination. Overall, specific guidelines for similar cases should be established.