| Literature DB >> 32842979 |
Lydia L Shook1, Jessica E Shui2, Adeline A Boatin3, Samantha Devane4, Natalie Croul3, Lael M Yonker4, Juan D Matute2, Rosiane S Lima4, Muriel Schwinn3, Dana Cvrk3, Laurel Gardner3, Robin Azevedo3, Suzanne Stanton3, Evan A Bordt5, Laura J Yockey3,6, Alessio Fasano4, Jonathan Z Li7, Xu G Yu7,8, Anjali J Kaimal9, Paul H Lerou2, Andrea G Edlow9,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Collection of biospecimens is a critical first step to understanding the impact of COVID-19 on pregnant women and newborns - vulnerable populations that are challenging to enroll and at risk of exclusion from research. We describe the establishment of a COVID-19 perinatal biorepository, the unique challenges imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic, and strategies used to overcome them.Entities:
Keywords: Biobank; COVID-19; Immune; Neonatology; Newborn; Obstetrics; Pandemic; Pregnancy; Repository; SARS-CoV-2; Vertical transmission
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32842979 PMCID: PMC7447612 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-020-01102-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Fig. 1Significant events during establishment of the COVID-19 perinatal biorepository impacting cumulative enrollment of pregnant women over time. a. Timeline of events impacting enrollment of pregnant women into the biorepository. b. Blue line indicates cumulative enrollment of COV19+ pregnant women. Black line indicates cumulative number of all enrolled pregnant women (COV19+ and COV19-). Phase 1 of enrollment is defined as April 2 to May 4, prior to interventions streamlining enrollment including (1) unification of Obstetrics and Neonatology teams, allowing enrollment into maternal and newborn protocols at the same time and (2) expansion of enrollment efforts to non-hospitalized women. Phase 2 is defined as May 4 to June 9. MGH = Massachusetts General Hospital. COV19+ = mother positive for SARS-CoV-2 on RT-PCR of nasopharyngeal swab at any time during pregnancy; COV19- = mother negative for SARS-CoV-2 on RT-PCR of nasopharyngeal swab when tested for COVID-19 symptoms or as part of universal screening protocol
Fig. 2Samples collected on maternal and newborn participants. a. Maternal samples included: (1) blood, including 10 mLs in EDTA tubes for plasma, peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) isolation, and granulocyte or neutrophil isolation; 5–7.5 mL in serum separator tube for serum; 2.5 mL in PaxGene tube for RNA; (2) saliva and/or (3) sputum (sputum if patient had productive cough); (4) nasal swab; (5) oropharyngeal swab; (6) maternal and fetal side placental biopsies for RNA extraction, and formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded full thickness placental block for in situ placental histopathology; (7) umbilical cord blood (EDTA, serum separator tube and PaxGene as described above for maternal blood); (8) colostrum or mature breastmilk; (9) vaginal swab; (10) rectal swab; (11) urine; (12) stool. Maternal blood was preferentially collected during a clinical blood draw by the clinical nurse. Placental biopsies and cord blood were collected by the obstetrical care team immediately after delivery, with support from study staff when possible. Women who planned to breastfeed were encouraged to clean the breast per instructions and self-collect any amount of colostrum or mature milk prior to discharge from the hospital. b. Newborn samples included: (1) nasopharyngeal swab; (2) oropharyngeal swab; (3) tracheal aspirate (if relevant); (4) neonatal blood collected into EDTA microtainer via heel-stick with clinical metabolic screen at 24–36 h of life; (5) urine collected using cotton balls placed into diaper; and (6) stool. Figure created with BioRender.com and reproduced with permission
Sample type, processing details and storage characteristics of maternal and neonatal specimens
| Sample Type | Processing details | Storage characteristics |
|---|---|---|
Maternal blooda ● SST × 1 ● EDTA × 2 ● PaxGene × 1 Umbilical cord blooda ● SST × 1 ● EDTA tube × 2 ● PaxGene tube × 1 Neonatal bloodb ● EDTA microtainer × 2 | SST tube spun at 1200 g × 10 min at RT, aliquoted into cryovials EDTA tube spun at 1000 g × 10 min at RT, aliquoted in cryovials Following plasma removal, remainder of blood diluted with 1:1 HBSS, layered on top of Ficoll at 2:1 ratio, spun at 1000 g at 30 min; PBMC layer collected, diluted in HBSS for counting Isolated using EasySep Direct Human Neutrophil Isolation Kit (StemCell Technologies) for subsequent RNA or DNA analysis Shaken vigorously at time of collection, store at RT for at least 2 h | − 80 °C − 80 °C Suspended in freezing medium at − 80 °C × 24 h, then transferred to liquid nitrogen for long term storage RNA: Resuspended at 1 × 105 cells/tube in Buffer TCL (Qiagen) and 1% BME DNA: Pelleted at 5 × 106 cells/tube and stored Collection tube stored in − 20 °C overnight, then transferred to − 80 °C |
Salivaa Sputuma | Mixed 1:1 with DTT and aliquoted | −80 °C |
Nasal swaba Nasopharyngeal swabb Oropharyngeal swaba, b | Collected in PBS, stored immediately at 4 °C after collection, processed within 3–4 h; PBS collection media aliquoted | −80 °C |
Vaginal swaba Rectal swaba | Stored immediately at 4 °C after collection; stalk removed, swab tip placed in cryovial and stored within 3–4 h of collection | −80 °C |
| Urinea, b | Maternal urine aliquoted into cryovials Neonatal urine-soaked cotton balls from newborns transferred to 60 mL syringe to dispense urine; aliquoted into cryovials | −80 °C |
| Placentaa | 2 x 5mm3 biopsies collected from maternal side and fetal side immediately after delivery, washed in PBS × 2, stored upright in RNAlater at 4 °C × 24 h. Full thickness placental sections fixed in formalin and paraffin-embedded into blocks for in situ histopathology | Biopsies divided into ~ 50 mg pieces and snap frozen in liquid nitrogen, then stored at − 80 °C RT |
| Stoola, b | Microspatula used to dispense ~ 1 cc into 1 mL RNAlater, empty cryovials, or 1 mL Buffered Glycerol Saline (Fisher) | −80 °C |
| Breastmilka | Stored at 4 °C after collection, milk collection tube rewarmed in hands briefly emulsify lipids then aliquoted into cryovials within 3–4 h of collection | −80 °C |
| Tracheal aspiratesb | Resuspended in trizol and aliquoted into cryovials | −80 °C |
SST Serum separator tube, PBMC Peripheral blood mononuclear cells, HBSS Hank’s balanced salt solution, BME β-mercaptoethanol, DTT DL-Dithiothreitol, RT room temperature. amaternal sample. bneonatal sample
Fig. 3Flow chart of participant enrollment and cohort in which samples have been collected. *Nine patients admitted to MGH who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 were not approached for enrollment. Five of nine delivered precipitously and could not be enrolled prior to delivery, and four of nine were admitted and delivered during time periods when study staff were not available to consent the patient. COV19+ = mother positive for SARS-CoV-2 on RT-PCR of nasopharyngeal swab at any time during pregnancy; COV19- = mother negative for SARS-CoV-2 on RT-PCR of nasopharyngeal swab when tested for COVID-19 symptoms or as part of universal screening protocol
Demographic characteristics of women enrolled in COVID-19 perinatal biorepository compared to women delivering at MGH during study period
| COVID-19 biorepository ( | MGH labor and delivery population ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 33 (29, 37) | 33 (30, 36) | 0.95 | |
| < 0.0001 | |||
| | 4 (4%) | 88 (12%) | |
| | 6 (6%) | 52 (7%) | |
| | 59 (59%) | 459 (62%) | |
| | 18 (18%) | 124 (17%) | |
| | 13 (13%) | 13 (2%) | |
| < 0.0001 | |||
| | 40 (40%) | 128 (17%) | |
| | 54 (54%) | 578 (79%) | |
| | 6 (6%) | 30 (4%) | |
| < 0.0001 | |||
| | 57 (57%) | 573 (78%) | |
| | 42 (42%) | 155 (21%) | |
| | 1 (1%) | 8 (1%) | |
| < 0.0001 | |||
| | 67 (67%) | 614 (83%) | |
| | 29 (29%) | 68 (9%) | |
| | 4 (4%) | 51 (7%) | |
| | 0 (0%) | 3 (0.4%) |
aPresented as median (IQR)
Fig. 4Total number of samples collected on each maternal participant by phase of enrollment and by SARS-Cov-2 status. a. Mean number of samples collected on each maternal participant was greater from women enrolled during Phase 2 compared to Phase 1. b. Mean number of samples collected per maternal participant was greater in SARS-CoV-2 negative than positive women. Data depicted as mean +/− SEM, **P < 0.01,***P < 0.001
Fig. 5Proportion of samples collected from maternal and newborn participants by COVID status. a. Proportion of women in which maternal blood, placenta, umbilical cord blood, and breastmilk were collected, by COVID status. b. Proportion of women in which urine, stool, vaginal swabs, and rectal swabs were collected, by COVID status. c. Proportion of women in which saliva, sputum, nasal swabs, and oropharyngeal swabs were collected, by COVID status. d. Proportion of newborns in which blood urine and stool were collected by mother’s COVID status. e. Proportion of newborns in which nasopharyngeal, oropharyngeal, and tracheal aspirate samples were collected by mother’s COVID status. COV19+ = mother positive for SARS-CoV-2 on RT-PCR of nasopharyngeal swab at any time during pregnancy; COV19- = mother negative for SARS-CoV-2 on RT-PCR of nasopharyngeal swab when tested for COVID-19 symptoms or as part of universal screening protocol. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01. The number of maternal and newborn participants providing each sample type by COVID status is presented in Additional file 1, Tables S2 and S3, respectively