| Literature DB >> 34556492 |
Jim M Wild1, Joanna C Porter2,3,4, Philip L Molyneaux5,6, Peter M George5,6, Iain Stewart5, Richard James Allen7, Raminder Aul8, John Kenneth Baillie9, Shaney L Barratt10, Paul Beirne11, Stephen M Bianchi12, John F Blaikley13,14, Jonathan Brooke15,16,17, Nazia Chaudhuri14,18, Guilhem Collier1, Emma K Denneny2,3,4, Annemarie Docherty19, Laura Fabbri5, Michael A Gibbons20,21, Fergus V Gleeson22, Bibek Gooptu23,24, Ian P Hall16,17, Neil A Hanley14,25, Melissa Heightman3, Toby E Hillman3, Simon R Johnson16,17, Mark G Jones26,27, Fasihul Khan16,17, Rod Lawson12, Puja Mehta2,28, Jane A Mitchell5, Manuela Platé2,29, Krisnah Poinasamy30, Jennifer K Quint5, Pilar Rivera-Ortega18, Malcolm Semple31, A John Simpson32,33, Djf Smith5,6, Mark Spears34,35, LIsa G Spencer36, Stefan C Stanel18,37, David R Thickett38,39, A A Roger Thompson1, Simon Lf Walsh5, Nicholas D Weatherley1, Mark Everard Weeks5, Dan G Wootton36,40, Chris E Brightling24, Rachel C Chambers2, Ling-Pei Ho41,42, Joseph Jacob4,43, Karen Piper Hanley37, Louise V Wain7,24, R Gisli Jenkins44,6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The COVID-19 pandemic has led to over 100 million cases worldwide. The UK has had over 4 million cases, 400 000 hospital admissions and 100 000 deaths. Many patients with COVID-19 suffer long-term symptoms, predominantly breathlessness and fatigue whether hospitalised or not. Early data suggest potentially severe long-term consequence of COVID-19 is development of long COVID-19-related interstitial lung disease (LC-ILD). METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The UK Interstitial Lung Disease Consortium (UKILD) will undertake longitudinal observational studies of patients with suspected ILD following COVID-19. The primary objective is to determine ILD prevalence at 12 months following infection and whether clinically severe infection correlates with severity of ILD. Secondary objectives will determine the clinical, genetic, epigenetic and biochemical factors that determine the trajectory of recovery or progression of ILD. Data will be obtained through linkage to the Post-Hospitalisation COVID platform study and community studies. Additional substudies will conduct deep phenotyping. The Xenon MRI investigation of Alveolar dysfunction Substudy will conduct longitudinal xenon alveolar gas transfer and proton perfusion MRI. The POST COVID-19 interstitial lung DiseasE substudy will conduct clinically indicated bronchoalveolar lavage with matched whole blood sampling. Assessments include exploratory single cell RNA and lung microbiomics analysis, gene expression and epigenetic assessment. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: All contributing studies have been granted appropriate ethical approvals. Results from this study will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; bronchoscopy; interstitial fibrosis
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34556492 PMCID: PMC8461362 DOI: 10.1136/bmjresp-2021-001049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Respir Res ISSN: 2052-4439
Figure 1UK Interstitial Lung Disease (UKILD)-Long COVID study flow. (A) Inclusion and exclusion criteria for UKILD-Long COVID study and planned primary analysis. (B) Planned secondary analysis flow and design including UKILD-Long COVID substudies. HRCT, High Resolution Computerised Tomography; MDT, Multi-Disciplinary Team; PHOSP-COVID, Post-Hospitalisation COVID; POSTCODE, POST COVID-19 interstitial lung DiseasE; COVID ILD, Post COVID ILD; XMAS, Xenon MRI investigation of Alveolar dysfunction Substudy.
Figure 2UK Interstitial Lung Disease-Long COVID radiological assessment. Classification criteria for radiological assessment of HRCT images.