| Literature DB >> 33098441 |
Erin A West1, Daniela Anker2, Rebecca Amati3, Aude Richard4,5, Ania Wisniak4,5, Audrey Butty6, Emiliano Albanese3, Murielle Bochud6, Arnaud Chiolero2,7,8, Luca Crivelli3,9, Stéphane Cullati2,10, Valérie d'Acremont6,11,12, Adina Mihaela Epure2,6, Jan Fehr1, Antoine Flahault5, Luc Fornerod13, Irène Frank14, Anja Frei1, Gisela Michel15, Semira Gonseth6, Idris Guessous4, Medea Imboden11,12, Christian R Kahlert16,17, Laurent Kaufmann18, Philipp Kohler16, Nicolai Mösli11,12, Daniel Paris11,12, Nicole Probst-Hensch11,12, Nicolas Rodondi7,19, Silvia Stringhini4,6, Thomas Vermes11,12, Fabian Vollrath20, Milo A Puhan21.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Seroprevalence studies to assess the spread of SARS-CoV-2 infection in the general population and subgroups are key for evaluating mitigation and vaccination policies and for understanding the spread of the disease both on the national level and for comparison with the international community.Entities:
Keywords: Hygiene practices; Longitudinal; Prevalence; SARS-CoV-2; Serosurvey; Socioeconomic differences
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33098441 PMCID: PMC7584867 DOI: 10.1007/s00038-020-01494-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Public Health ISSN: 1661-8556 Impact factor: 3.380
Characteristics of the population-based seroprevalence studies by study center (Corona Immunitas, Switzerland, 2020–2021)
| Region | Setting | Aimed sample size | Laboratory methods | Biobank for long-term storage | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study centers, city, cantons covered by the study (name of the study) | Sampling method* | Age groups (yrs) | Longitudinal component** | Per age group | Per sample | Total | Quantity of blood collected (ml) | Sample type | Storage temperature and duration | Consent for genetic analyses | |
| Geneva University Hospital, Geneva, GE, Switzerland, 2020 (SEROCoV-POP) | Random sampling from participants in former study (de Mestral et al. | 12 (Apr to Jun) | 5+ | Yes | N/A | N/A | 8640 | 1.5–3 (age dependent) | Serum, no preparation | − 80 °C for max 30 yrs | No |
| Unisanté, Lausanne, VD, Switzerland, 2020 (SérocoViD) | Standard* | 6 (s1: May; s2: Nov) | 0.5–4 5–9 10–14 15–19 20–39 40–64 65–74 75+ | Yes | 100 | 800 | 4800 | 2.5–25 (age dependent) | Serum and plasma | − 80 °C for 20 years or unlimited time (depending on consent) | Yes for ≥ 14-year-olds |
| Population Health Laboratory, Fribourg, FR, Switzerland, 2020 (Corona Immunitas Fribourg) | Standard* | 2 (s1: Jul, Aug s2: Nov) | 20–64 65+ | No | 300 | 600 | 1200 | 7.5 | Serum | N/A | N/A |
| Swiss TPH, Basel, BS and BL, Switzerland, 2020 (COVCO-Basel) | Age-stratified and half-canton-stratified random subsamples of digital cohort; digital cohort was sampled through standard* procedure | 2 (Jun and Sep) | 18–49 50–64 65+ + family members | Yes | 200 | 600 | 1200 (+ 800 family members) | 10–20 (age dependent) | Serum, EDTA | − 80 °C for 10 yrs or unlimited (depending on consent) | Yes |
| Cantonal Medical Service, Neuchâtel, NE, Switzerland, 2020 (Corona Immunitas Neuchâtel) | Standard* | 2 (s1: Jul; s2: Nov) | 20–64 65+ | No | 300 | 600 | 1200 | 12 | Serum | − 80 °C for 5 yrs | No |
| Cantonal hospital and Children’s Hospital of Eastern Switzerland, St. Gallen, SG and GR (Corona Immunitas Eastern Switzerland) | Standard* | 1 (Sep) | 5–19 20–64 | Yes | 300 | 750 | 1500 | 10 | Serum | N/A | N/A |
| Institute of Public Health and Department of Business Economics, Health & Social Care, Lugano, TI, Switzerland, 2020 (Corona Immunitas Ticino) | Standard* + family members aged 5–20 and 65+ yrs in s2 | 2 (s1: Jul and s2: Nov) | s1: 20–44 45–64 s2: 5–9 10–13 14–19 65–74 75+ | Yes | s1: 200–500 s2: no target For family members aged < 20 and 65+ yrs) | s1: 400–1000 s2: 800–2000 + 400–2000 family members | 1600–5000 | 8.5 | Serum | − 20 °C and − 80 °C for 1–2 yrs | No |
| Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Prevention Institute, Zurich, ZH, Switzerland, 2020 (Corona Immunitas Zurich) | Standard* | 2 (s1: Jun, Aug; s2: Nov) | s1: 20–44 45–64 65+ s2: 20–64 65+ | Yes | s1: 20–44 yrs, 45–64 years, 65+ yrs, s2: 20–64 yrs, 65+ yrs, | s1: 800 s2: 400 | 1200 | 20 | Plasma | − 80 °C for 5 yrs | Unclear |
| Valais Health Observatory & Central Hospital Institute, Valais Hospital, Sion, VS (Corona Immunitas Valais/Wallis) | Standard* | 1 (Oct) | 20–64 65+ | No | 600 (3 regions; 200/region) | 1200 (3 regions; 400/region) | 1200 | CND | CND | CND | No |
| Institute of Primary Health Care (BIHAM), Bern, BE, Switzerland, 2020 (Corona Immunitas Bern) | Standard* | CND | 20–64 65+ | No | 300 | 600 | 1200 | 7.5 | Serum | N/A | N/A |
| Clinical Trial Unit (CTU), Luzern Cantonal Hospital, LU, Switzerland, 2020 (Corona Immunitas Luzern) | Standard* | CND | 20–64 65 + | No | 300 | 600 | 1200 | 7.5 | Serum | N/A | N/A |
All months are in 2020. Items in this table are based on CONSISE statement on the reporting of Seroepidemiologic Studies for influenza (10). N/A, not applicable; yrs, years; s1-12, sample 1–12; n, number; GE, Canton Geneva; VD, Canton Vaud; FR, Canton Fribourg; BS, Canton Basel-City; BL, Canton Basel-Land; NE, Canton Neuchâtel; SG, Canton St. Gallen; TI, Canton Ticino; ZH, Canton Zurich; VS, Canton Valais; BE, Canton Bern; LU, Canton Lucerne; CND, currently not defined; SérocoViD, Understanding community transmission and herd immunity related to SARS-CoV-2 in the Canton of Vaud to inform public health decisions, Switzerland, 2020; CoV-Co-Basel, Population-based SARS-CoV-2 Cohort Basel-Land and Basel-City, Switzerland, 2020; CTU, Clinical Trial Unit of Luzern Cantonal Hospital; BIHAM, Bern Institute for Family Medicine. (Corona Immunitas, Switzerland, 2020–2021)
*Standard sampling method: random sampling from residential registry of each Canton stratified by pre-defined age groups
**Longitudinal component: refers to whether there are several blood collections for serology in the same individuals
Characteristics of specific subpopulations investigated by study center (Corona Immunitas, Switzerland, 2020–2021)
| Location | Subpopulation and aim | Setting | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study center, city, canton covered by the study | Subpopulation investigated (name study) | Specific aim | Study design (time points and setting of data collection)* | Sampling and aimed sample size | Recruitment period |
| Geneva University Hospital, Geneva | Several studies, independently funded, designed by different investigators | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Unisanté, Lausanne, VD | Confirmed COVID-19 cases and their household or otherwise close contacts (SérocoViD) | Investigate SARS-CoV-2 transmission in the community, including: Radius and influencing factors of transmission, Proportion of asymptomatic and pauci-symptomatic individuals, Characteristics of confirmed COVID-19 cases and seropositive close contacts | Cross-sectional seroprevalence study | 200 symptomatic COVID-19 patients with positive RT-PCR registered during first 5 weeks of the pandemic in the cantonal registry, including: Index cases of the first 10 days ( Randomly selected cases in weeks 2, 3, 4, and 5 ( All cases of children ( + all close contacts identified through the active tracing | Apr |
Employees in following sectors: food retailer public transportation post office laundry services (SérocoViD) | Seroprevalence in employees working in highly exposed sectors due to proximity to customers or other employees | Cross-sectional seroprevalence study | Random sampling from all employees in predefined sectors. Number invited: Food retailer, Public transportation, Post office, Laundry services, | May | |
| Asylum seekers (SérocoViD) | Seroprevalence in asylum seekers constrained to live in the same home in high numbers | Cross-sectional seroprevalence study | Two centers of similar size and location: one with many reported COVID-19 cases and one with few | May | |
| Population Health Laboratory, Fribourg | None | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Swiss TPH, Basel, BS and BL | Family members of participants in the population-based seroprevalence study (Table | Compare seroprevalence and mental health, well-being, behavior within families | Longitudinal seroprevalence study | 2 samples of 400 family members of participants in the population-based study (total | Jul–Sep, Oct–Dec |
| Cantonal hospital and Children’s Hospital of Eastern Switzerland, St. Gallen, SG and GR | Hospital employees from healthcare institutions in Eastern Switzerland (SURPRISE) | Seroprevalence, symptoms and risk factors for COVID-19 among healthcare workers | Longitudinal seroprevalence study (BL + 1 FU) | All employees of the Cantonal hospital St. Gallen aged 16 yrs and more are invited, target | Jul and Nov |
| Workers at the children’s hospital “Ostschweizer Kinderspital” (CIMOKS) | Investigate seroconversion for SARS-CoV-2 among workers of a children’s hospital | Cross-sectional seroprevalence study (capillary blood collection) | Weekly random samples of 50 German-speaking workers of the children’s hospital | Jun and Sep | |
| Institute of Public Health and Department of Business Economics, Health & Social Care, Lugano, TI | Healthcare workers (SARS-CoV-2) | Seroprevalence by level of risk of contagion across health services in healthcare workers. Level of risk is based on site (COVID-19 or non-COVID-19 dedicated clinic), ward, and profession, e.g., medical vs administrative staff | Longitudinal seroprevalence study (BL + 2 FU or more) | All healthcare workers of the cantonal hospitals ( | May and July |
| Nursing home healthcare workers (COV-RISK) | Seroprevalence | Longitudinal seroprevalence study (serology: BL + 3 FU; questionnaires: monthly) | All healthcare workers in selected nursing home (convenience selection; | Jul | |
| Nursing home residents (COV-RISK) | Seroprevalence and psychological impact in nursing home residents | Longitudinal seroprevalence study (BL + 3 FU; capillary blood is optional) | All residents in selected nursing home (convenience selection; | Jul | |
| Inter-generational household contacts/family | Secondary infection rate, secondary attack rate | Cross-sectional seroprevalence study | Sep | ||
| Inter-generational household contacts/family | Rate of re-infection and duration of acquired immunity | Longitudinal nested case–control study (BL + 3 FU; BL is part of the population-based study in Table | N total = 200 case–controls from sample 2 of the population-based study (Table Positive cases defined based on seropositivity: < 20 yrs, Matched negative controls: < 20 yrs, | Sep | |
| Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Prevention Institute, Zurich, ZH | Spitex employees | Seroprevalence in particularly exposed population | Cross-sectional seroprevalence study | All Spitex employees (convenience selection) | Jul |
| Employees of nursing homes | Seroprevalence in particularly exposed population | Cross-sectional seroprevalence study | All employees of nursing homes (convenience selection) | Jul | |
| Persons who receive opioid agonist therapy (substitutions) | Seroprevalence in persons who receive opioid agonist therapy (substitutions) | Cross-sectional seroprevalence study | All persons receiving therapy at Arud Center for Addiction Medicine (convenience selection) | Jul | |
| Individuals participating in the SwissPrEPared study | Seroprevalence in persons who take pre-exposure HIV prophylaxis and participate in the SwissPrEPared study | Cross-sectional seroprevalence study | All participants of SwissPrEPared (convenience selection; | Jul | |
| Persons who contacted the COVID-19-Test Center of the UZH for a SARS-CoV-2 antibody test because of symptoms suggestive of COVID-19 | Seroprevalence persons with proactive request for SARS-CoV-2 antibody test | Cross-sectional seroprevalence study | All who request a test at the COVID-19 Test Center (convenience selection) | Jul | |
| School children, attending grades 1–8, i.e., approximate age 5–16 years old, in a public or private school + parents and school employees of the selected schools (Ciao Corona) | Seroprevalance and its temporal changes, clustering of cases within classes, schools and districts, symptoms, and risk factors in a representative cohort of children and adolescents shortly after reopening of the school system and thereafter | Longitudinal seroprevalence study (serology: BL + 2 FU, questionnaire: monthly; school principals followed-up with monthly questionnaires only) | Random sampling on school level, grade level, and class level. Target sample size: Primary school children, Secondary school children, Parents, School employees, | Jun (children) and Aug (adults) | |
| Valais Health Observatory & Central Hospital Institute, Valais Hospital, Sion, VS | None | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Institute of Primary Health Care (BIHAM), Bern, BE | None | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Clinical Trial Unit (CTU), Luzern Cantonal Hospital, LU | None | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
All months are in 2020. Items in this table are based on CONSISE statement on the reporting of Seroepidemiologic Studies for influenza (ROSES-I statement) (10). N/A, not applicable; yrs, years; s1-12, sample 1–12; n, number; BL, baseline; FU, follow-up; GE, Canton Geneva; VD, Canton Vaud; FR, Canton Fribourg; BS, Canton Basel-City; BL, Canton Basel-Land; NE, Canton Neuchâtel; SG, Canton St. Gallen; TI, Canton Ticino; ZH, Canton Zurich; UZH, University of Zurich; VS, Canton Valais; BE, Canton Bern; LU, Canton Lucerne; SérocoViD, Understanding community transmission and herd immunity related to SARS-CoV-2 in the Canton of Vaud to inform public health decisions, Switzerland, 2020; CoV-Co-Basel, Population-based SARS-CoV-2 Cohort Basel-Land and Basel-City, Switzerland 2020; SURPRISE, Severe AcUte Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus-2 among Healthcare Professionals In Switzerland, Switzerland, 2020; CIMOKS, Corona immunity for employees of the Children's Hospital of Eastern Switzerland, Switzerland, 2020; CTU, Clinical Trial Unit of Luzern Cantonal Hospital; BIHAM, Bern Institute for Family Medicine. (Corona Immunitas, Switzerland, 2020–2021)
*Data collection involves both blood sample collection for serology and questionnaire unless stated otherwise
Fig. 1Phases of the pandemic as defined in the Corona Immunitas program (Switzerland 2020–2021)
Fig. 2Overview of seroprevalence studies in Switzerland (Corona Immunitas 2020–2021). ZH Zurich, BE Bern, LU Luzern, UR Uri, SZ Schwytz, OW Obwald, NW Nidwald, GL Glarus, ZG Zug, FR Fribourg, SO Solothurn, BS Basel-City, BL Basel-Land, SH Schaffhausen, AR Appenzell Ausserrhoden, AI Appenzell Innerrhoden, SG St. Gallen, GR Graubünden, AG Aargau, TG Thurgau, TI Ticino, VD Vaud, VS Valais, NE Neuchâtel, GE Geneva, JU Jura, PrEP Pre-exposure prophylaxis for HIV prevention. See Tables 1 and 2 for a detailed description of the studies. (Corona Immunitas, Switzerland, 2020–2021). *Children study with white bottoms instead of blue bottoms means there is no population-based children’s study
Fig. 3Example study flow of seroprevalence studies (Corona Immunitas, Switzerland, 2020–2021)
Example of schedule of assessments (Corona Immunitas, Switzerland, 2020–2021)
| Contacts | Invitation/recruitment | Study visit (BL) | Digital follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|
| Timing | Prior to Day 0 | Day 0 | Week 1 to week 52 (weekly) |
| Study invitation | X | ||
| Invitation for Baseline data collection (and visit—depending on center) | X | ||
| Confirmation letter or email, written information | X | ||
Baseline questionnaire (online): Personal demographics & health data COVID-19 specific data; including symptoms, hospitalization, relevant medications, other SARS-CoV-2 tests Socio-demographic data Economic impact due to lockdown measures Persons in immediate vicinity and their relevant symptoms Preventive measures, exposure and level of concern over pandemic | X | X | |
| Oral and/or written information | X | ||
| Check inclusion-/ exclusion criteria | X | ||
| Written consent | X | ||
| Blood sampling | X | ||
| Information on test interpretation | X | ||
| Information on digital follow-up | X | ||
| Information on further procedure according to subpopulation | X | ||
Weekly digital follow-up questionnaire (online): Symptoms, healthcare professional contacts, hospitalizations, test results, preventive measures | X | ||
Monthly digital follow-up questionnaire (online): Access to health care, behavior, daily activities, mental health, well-being, usage of SwissCovid App (FOPH | X |
BL baseline