Assessment of the seroprevalence and sero-incidence of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) among Nursing Home (NH) residents and staff in Belgium.
In this longitudinal cohort study, 3036, nursing home (NH) residents (1656) and staff (1380), spread over 69 nursing homes throughout Belgium will be repeatedly sampled at a 2-month interval. Seroprevalence and -incidence will be assessed by means of a point-of-care rapid antibody test with additional collection of a Dry Blood Spot sample for quantitative detection of immune markers\*. Sample collection (capillary blood samples) at baseline (day 0, week 0) will start in a staggered way, so all baseline samples among the different nursing homes are collected within the first 21 days after collection of the first sample. Follow-up sample collection will occur with a 2-month interval in week 8, week 16, week 24, week 32 and week 40 after the baseline collection of that specific nursing home. At each timepoint, questionnaires will be taken concerning medical history, clinical outcomes and potential COVID-19 riskfactors. The recruited NHs will be equally spread across the Belgian territory according to geographic and demographic characteristics to guarantee general representativity. Forty-four participants (20 staff, 24 residents) will be randomly included per nursing home. (\* collection of the Dry Blood Spot is part of a sub-study by Ghent University)
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
3,008
Bimonthly finger pricks with collection of 1-10 drops of capillary blood for detection of anti-SARS-CoV-2 immune markers
Ghent University
Ghent, Oost-Vlaanderen, Belgium
Change of seroprevalence of anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies among nursing home residents and staff in Belgium
Change of seroprevalence of anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies among Belgian nursing home residents and staff detected in their capillary blood by a point of care test during a period of 10 months.
Time frame: "Month 0", "Month 2", "Month 4", "Month 6", "Month 8", "Month 10", "Month 13", "Month 16", "Month 19", "Month 22"
Change in SARS-CoV-2 seroconversion among nursing home residents and staff in Belgium
Change in SARS-CoV-2 seroconversion among Belgian nursing home residents and staff conducted by detecting specific SARS-CoV-2 IgG/IgM in their capillary blood by a point of care test at each of the study follow-up testing points.
Time frame: "Month 0", "Month 2", "Month 4", "Month 6", "Month 8", "Month 10", "Month 13", "Month 16", "Month 19", "Month 22"
Assess the risk of getting symptomatically SARS-CoV-2 infected between the seropositive and seronegative group at baseline
For all participants, the hazard of new symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infections between sero-positive and -negative participants at the baseline visit will be estimated and reported as cumulative survival rates after 10 months of follow-up with 95% Confidence Interval (CI). The analysis will account the clustered nature of participants within NH and will be adjusted for the stratification factors province and type of participant (staff vs resident). If a vaccine would become available during the study period, the admission of a vaccine will be added as a time-varying covariate to the analysis.
Time frame: 10 months
Assess the proportion of deaths within 10 months between sero-positive and -negative participants at baseline visit for NH residents.
For NH residents, the proportion of deaths within 10 months of follow-up between sero-positive and -negative participants at the baseline visit will be assessed. Province, age, gender, care profile, presence of COVID-specific comorbidities at baseline and timevarying covariate COVID-19 vaccine will be considered for model adjustment.
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Time frame: 10 months
Assess the seroconversion time in the group of sero-negative participants at baseline visit in relation to observed risk factors such as care dependency scale (for NH residents),type of job assignment and flu vaccination (for staff)
The sero-conversion time in the group of sero-negative participants at the baseline visit will be modelled separately for residents and staff, on the one hand assessing potential differences between care profiles or residence ward (dementia unit or not) for NH residents, and differences between flu vaccination status and type of job assignment for the staff on the other hand. For both types of participants the model will be adjusted for province, age, gender, presence of COVID-specific comorbidities at baseline and time-varying covariate COVID-19 vaccine.
Time frame: 10 months
Assess the duration of SARS-CoV-2 antigen specific seropositivity among NH residents and staff in Belgium.
The duration of SARS-CoV-2 antigen specific seropositivity among NH residents and staff in Belgium will be modelled by means of interval-censored survival analysis.
Time frame: 10 months
Assess the time until death within 10 months between sero-positive and -negative participants at baseline visit for NH residents
For NH residents, the time until death between sero-positive and -negative participants at the baseline visit will be assessed within 10 months. Province, age, gender, care profile, presence of COVID-specific comorbidities at baseline and timevarying covariate COVID-19 vaccine will be considered for model adjustment.
Time frame: 10 months