Healthcare Workers Bioresource: Study outline and baseline characteristics of a prospective healthcare worker cohort to study immune protection and pathogenesis in COVID-19
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ArticleAuthor/s
Augusto, João BMenacho, Katia
Andiapen, Mervyn
Bowles, Ruth
Burton, Maudrian
Welch, Sophie
Bhuva, Anish N
Seraphim, Andreas
Pade, Corinna
Joy, George
Jensen, Melanie
Davies, Rhodri H
Captur, Gabriella
Fontana, Marianna
Montgomery, Hugh
O'Brien, Ben
Hingorani, Aroon D
Cutino-Moguel, Teresa
McKnight, Áine
Abbass, Hakam
Alfarih, Mashael
Alldis, Zoe
Baca, Georgina L
Boulter, Alex
Bracken, Olivia V
Bullock, Natalie
Champion, Nicola
Chan, Carmen
Couto-Parada, Xose
Dieobi-Anene, Keenan
Feehan, Karen
Figtree, Gemma
Figtree, Melanie C
Finlay, Malcolm
Forooghi, Nasim
Gibbons, Joseph M
Griffiths, Peter
Hamblin, Matt
Howes, Lee
Itua, Ivie
Jones, Meleri
Jardim, Victor
Kapil, Vikas
Lee, Wing-Yiu Jason
Mandadapu, Vineela
Mfuko, Celina
Mitchelmore, Oliver
Palma, Susana
Patel, Kush
Petersen, Steffen E
Piniera, Brian
Raine, Rosalind
Rapala, Alicja
Richards, Amy
Sambile, Genine
de Sousa, Jorge Couto
Sugimoto, Michelle
Thornton, George D
Artico, Jessica
Zahedi, Dan
Parker, Ruth
Robathan, Mathew
Hickling, Lauren M
Ntusi, Ntobeko
Semper, Amanda
Brooks, Tim
Jones, Jessica
Tucker, Art
Veerapen, Jessry
Vijayakumar, Mohit
Wodehouse, Theresa
Wynne, Lucinda
Treibel, Thomas A
Noursadeghi, Mahdad
Manisty, Charlotte
Moon, James C
Abstract
"Background: Most biomedical research has focused on sampling COVID-19 patients presenting to hospital with advanced disease, with less focus on the asymptomatic or paucisymptomatic. We established a bioresource with serial sampling of health care workers (HCWs) designed to obtain ...
See more"Background: Most biomedical research has focused on sampling COVID-19 patients presenting to hospital with advanced disease, with less focus on the asymptomatic or paucisymptomatic. We established a bioresource with serial sampling of health care workers (HCWs) designed to obtain samples before and during mainly mild disease, with follow-up sampling to evaluate the quality and duration of immune memory. Methods: We conducted a prospective observational study on HCWs from three hospital sites in London, initially at a single centre (recruited just prior to first peak community transmission in London), but then extended to multiple sites 3 weeks later (recruitment still ongoing, target n=1,000). Asymptomatic participants attending work complete a health questionnaire, and provide a nasal swab (for SARS-CoV-2 RNA by RT-PCR tests) and blood samples (mononuclear cells, serum, plasma, RNA and DNA are biobanked) at 16 weekly study visits, and at 6 and 12 months. Results: Preliminary baseline results for the first 731 HCWs (400 single-centre, 331 multicentre extension) are presented. Mean age was 38±11 years; 67% are female, 31% nurses, 20% doctors, and 19% work in intensive care units. COVID-19-associated risk factors were: 37% black, Asian or minority ethnicities; 18% smokers; 13% obesity; 11% asthma; 7% hypertension and 2% diabetes mellitus. At baseline, 41% reported symptoms in the preceding 2 weeks. Preliminary test results from the initial cohort (n=400) are available: PCR at baseline for SARS-CoV-2 was positive in 28 of 396 (7.1%, 95% CI 4.9-10.0%) and 15 of 385 (3.9%, 2.4-6.3%) had circulating IgG antibodies. Conclusions: This COVID-19 bioresource established just before the peak of infections in the UK will provide longitudinal assessments of incident infection and immune responses in HCWs through the natural time course of disease and convalescence. The samples and data from this bioresource are available to academic collaborators by application https://covid-consortium.com/application-for-samples/.
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See more"Background: Most biomedical research has focused on sampling COVID-19 patients presenting to hospital with advanced disease, with less focus on the asymptomatic or paucisymptomatic. We established a bioresource with serial sampling of health care workers (HCWs) designed to obtain samples before and during mainly mild disease, with follow-up sampling to evaluate the quality and duration of immune memory. Methods: We conducted a prospective observational study on HCWs from three hospital sites in London, initially at a single centre (recruited just prior to first peak community transmission in London), but then extended to multiple sites 3 weeks later (recruitment still ongoing, target n=1,000). Asymptomatic participants attending work complete a health questionnaire, and provide a nasal swab (for SARS-CoV-2 RNA by RT-PCR tests) and blood samples (mononuclear cells, serum, plasma, RNA and DNA are biobanked) at 16 weekly study visits, and at 6 and 12 months. Results: Preliminary baseline results for the first 731 HCWs (400 single-centre, 331 multicentre extension) are presented. Mean age was 38±11 years; 67% are female, 31% nurses, 20% doctors, and 19% work in intensive care units. COVID-19-associated risk factors were: 37% black, Asian or minority ethnicities; 18% smokers; 13% obesity; 11% asthma; 7% hypertension and 2% diabetes mellitus. At baseline, 41% reported symptoms in the preceding 2 weeks. Preliminary test results from the initial cohort (n=400) are available: PCR at baseline for SARS-CoV-2 was positive in 28 of 396 (7.1%, 95% CI 4.9-10.0%) and 15 of 385 (3.9%, 2.4-6.3%) had circulating IgG antibodies. Conclusions: This COVID-19 bioresource established just before the peak of infections in the UK will provide longitudinal assessments of incident infection and immune responses in HCWs through the natural time course of disease and convalescence. The samples and data from this bioresource are available to academic collaborators by application https://covid-consortium.com/application-for-samples/.
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Date
2020Funding information
Sanofi (United States)
British Heart Foundation
National Institute for Health Research
Rosetrees Trust
Wellcome Trust
European Commission
Licence
OtherFaculty/School
Faculty of Medicine and Health, Sydney Medical SchoolShare