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SARS-CoV-2 infection rates of antibody-positive compared with antibody-negative health-care workers in England: a large, multicentre, prospective cohort study (SIREN)

Authors
Victoria Hall,Sarah Foulkes
André Charlett,Ana Atti,Edward Monk,Ruth Simmons,Edgar Wellington,Michelle Cole,Ayoub Saei,Blanché Oguti,Katie Munro,Sarah Wallace,Peter Kirwan,Madhumita Shrotri,Amoolya Vusirikala,Sakib Rokadiya,Meaghan Kall,Maria Zambon,Mary Ramsay,Tim Brooks,Colin Brown,Meera Chand,Susan Hopkins,Nick Andrews,Humaira Aziz,D Camero,Christine Carr,MA Chand,Harriet Crawford,John Conneely,Silvia D’Arcangelo,Joanna Ellis,Simon Evans,Natalie Gillson,Robin Gopal,Laura Hall,VJ Hall,Pauline Harrington,Jacqueline Hewson,Katja Höschler,Dean Ironmonger,Jasmin Islam,Ioannis Karagiannis,O Kay,Jameel Khawam,E King,Robert Kyffin,Angie Lackenby,M Lattimore,Ezra Linley,Jamie Bernal,Lesley Mabey,Reuben McGregor,Shahjahan Miah,Z Naheed,A Nissr,AM O'Connell,Henrietta Okafor,S Organ,J Osbourne,Ashley Otter,Monika Patel,Steven Platt,Diane Pople,Kyle Potts,Julie Robotham,Cathy Rowe,G Sebbage,Amanda Semper,A Soriano,P Staves,Sean Taylor,Adam Taylor,A Tengbe,Simon Tonge,Elizabeth Wellington,Diane Corrigan,Muhammad Sartaj,Lisa Cromey,Sean Campbell,Kate Braithwaite,Lesley Price,Lynne Gilfillan,Sally Stewart,ED Lacey,Linda Partridge,Gerin Stevens,Yvette Ellis,Harry Hodgson,Chris Norman,Beatriz Larrú,Stephen McWilliam,Stephen Winchester,P Cieciwa,Ahna Pai,Carmel Loughrey,Alison Watt,Frank Adair,Alexander Hawkins,Alastair Grant,R Temple-Purcell,Joanne Howard,Nicola Slawson,Chittaranjan Subudhi,Sophie Davies,Andrew Bexley,Rebecca Penn,Nicholas Wong,G Boyd,Aditi Rajgopal,Alejandro Arenas‐Pinto,R. Matthews,Amanda Whileman,Richard Laugharne,Jocelyn Ledger,Timothy Barnes,Cassandra Jones,D. BOTES,Nihil Chitalia,Sheharyar Akhtar,Greg Harrison,Simon Horne,Neil Walker,Ken Agwuh,Victoria Maxwell,Jillian Graves,Stacy Williams,Anna O’Kelly,P. Ridley,Alison Cowley,Hilary Johnstone,P Swift,Jane Democratis,Manjula Meda,Céline Callens,Stacy Beazer,S Hams,Val Irvine,Badrinathan Chandrasekaran,Cecily Forsyth,J Radmore,Christie Thomas,Kevin Brown,Sally Roberts,Penelope Burns,Kavitha Gajee,TM Byrne,Rikke Andersen,Stacey Knight,Emily MacNaughton,Ben Burton,Hazel Smith,R Chaudhuri,K Hollinshead,RJ Shorten,Alfred Swan,C Favager,Jennifer Murira,Sarah Baillon,Sarah Hamer,Katherine Gantert,Jennifer Russell,D Brennan,Aparna Dave,Akshita Chawla,F Westell,David Adeboyeku,Padmasayee Papineni,Claire Pegg,Mathew Williams,Shazaad Ahmad,Samantha Ingram,Christian Gabriel,K Pagget,Gerald Maloney,James Ashcroft,Ippolito Rosario,Roxanne Crosby‐Nwaobi,Courtney Reeks,Stephen Fowler,L Prentice,Mark Spears,G McKerron,K McLelland-Brooks,J. Anderson,Sahai Donaldson,Kate Templeton,Louise Coke,Ngozi Elumogo,Julie Elliott,Debra Padgett,Mariyam Mirfenderesky,Andrew Cross,James Price,Sean Joyce,I Sinanovic,Marcos Howard,Thomas Lewis,Paul Cowling,D Potoczna,Samuel Brand,Lynn Sheridan,Beverley Wadams,Allyson Lloyd,Johanna Mouland,Jon Giles,G Pottinger,H Coles,Mercy Joseph,Mei Lee,Serena Orr,Helen Chenoweth,Cressida Auckland,Rebecca Lear,Tabitha Mahungu,Alison Rodger,K. Penny-Thomas,S Pai,Julie Zamikula,Emma Smith,Sheri Stone,E Boldock,Deborah Howcroft,Connor Thompson,Masaharu Aga,P Domingos,Sinead Gormley,Laura Marsh,Simon Tazzyman,Lynne Allsop,Shrikant Ambalkar,M Beekes,Sherly Jose,James Tomlinson,Alison Jones,Cathy Price,Justin Pepperell,Michael Schultz,Jacqueline Day,Alan Boulos,Emmanuel Defever,D. McCracken,Kathleen Gray,A Houston,Tim Planche,Robin Jones,Diane Wycherley,Stephen Bennett,Joel Marrs,Kofi Nimako,Benjamin Stewart,Nagesh Kalakonda,Sushant Khanduri,A Ashby,Matthew Holden,Natasha Mahabir,Jayne Harwood,Brendan Payne,Karem Court,R Longfellow,ME Green,L Hughes,M Halkes,Pauline Mercer,Alun Roebuck,Eleri Wilson-Davies,Laura Gallego‐Yerga,Rajeka Lazarus,Nicolas Aldridge,Laurence Berry,Frances Game,Tim Reynolds,Chris Holmes,Martin Wiselka,Andrew Higham,Michael Booth,Christopher Duff,Julie Alderton,H Jory,Edoardo Virgilio,T Chin,MZ Qazzafi,AM Moody,RE Tilley,Tracy Donaghy,Kate Shipman,Rafael Sierra,Neil Jones,Gary Mills,Daniel Harvey,YWJ Huang,J Birch,Lisa Robinson,S Board,A Broadley,C Laven,Neil Todd,David Eyre,Katie Jeffery,Susanna Dunachie,C.J. Duncan,Paul Klenerman,Lance Turtle,Thushan Silva,Helen Baxendale
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,Jonathan Heeney
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Apr 1, 2021
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Abstract

BackgroundIncreased understanding of whether individuals who have recovered from COVID-19 are protected from future SARS-CoV-2 infection is an urgent requirement. We aimed to investigate whether antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 were associated with a decreased risk of symptomatic and asymptomatic reinfection.MethodsA large, multicentre, prospective cohort study was done, with participants recruited from publicly funded hospitals in all regions of England. All health-care workers, support staff, and administrative staff working at hospitals who could remain engaged in follow-up for 12 months were eligible to join The SARS-CoV-2 Immunity and Reinfection Evaluation study. Participants were excluded if they had no PCR tests after enrolment, enrolled after Dec 31, 2020, or had insufficient PCR and antibody data for cohort assignment. Participants attended regular SARS-CoV-2 PCR and antibody testing (every 2–4 weeks) and completed questionnaires every 2 weeks on symptoms and exposures. At enrolment, participants were assigned to either the positive cohort (antibody positive, or previous positive PCR or antibody test) or negative cohort (antibody negative, no previous positive PCR or antibody test). The primary outcome was a reinfection in the positive cohort or a primary infection in the negative cohort, determined by PCR tests. Potential reinfections were clinically reviewed and classified according to case definitions (confirmed, probable, or possible) and symptom-status, depending on the hierarchy of evidence. Primary infections in the negative cohort were defined as a first positive PCR test and seroconversions were excluded when not associated with a positive PCR test. A proportional hazards frailty model using a Poisson distribution was used to estimate incidence rate ratios (IRR) to compare infection rates in the two cohorts.FindingsFrom June 18, 2020, to Dec 31, 2020, 30 625 participants were enrolled into the study. 51 participants withdrew from the study, 4913 were excluded, and 25 661 participants (with linked data on antibody and PCR testing) were included in the analysis. Data were extracted from all sources on Feb 5, 2021, and include data up to and including Jan 11, 2021. 155 infections were detected in the baseline positive cohort of 8278 participants, collectively contributing 2 047 113 person-days of follow-up. This compares with 1704 new PCR positive infections in the negative cohort of 17 383 participants, contributing 2 971 436 person-days of follow-up. The incidence density was 7·6 reinfections per 100 000 person-days in the positive cohort, compared with 57·3 primary infections per 100 000 person-days in the negative cohort, between June, 2020, and January, 2021. The adjusted IRR was 0·159 for all reinfections (95% CI 0·13–0·19) compared with PCR-confirmed primary infections. The median interval between primary infection and reinfection was more than 200 days.InterpretationA previous history of SARS-CoV-2 infection was associated with an 84% lower risk of infection, with median protective effect observed 7 months following primary infection. This time period is the minimum probable effect because seroconversions were not included. This study shows that previous infection with SARS-CoV-2 induces effective immunity to future infections in most individuals.FundingDepartment of Health and Social Care of the UK Government, Public Health England, The National Institute for Health Research, with contributions from the Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish governments.

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