Prospective observational study and serosurvey of SARS-CoV-2 infection in asymptomatic healthcare workers at a Canadian tertiary care center

Author:

Ferreira Victor H.ORCID,Chruscinski Andrzej,Kulasingam Vathany,Pugh Trevor J.ORCID,Dus Tamara,Wouters Brad,Oza Amit,Ierullo Matthew,Ku Terrance,Majchrzak-Kita Beata,Humar Sonika T.,Bahinskaya Ilona,Pinzon Natalia,Zhang Jianhua,Heisler Lawrence E.,Krzyzanowski Paul M.,Lam Bernard,Lungu Ilinca M.,Manase Dorin,Pace Krista M.,Mashouri Pouria,Brudno Michael,Garrels Michael,Mazzulli Tony,Cybulsky Myron,Humar Atul,Kumar Deepali

Abstract

Health care workers (HCWs) are at higher risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection and may play a role in transmitting the infection to vulnerable patients and members of the community. This is particularly worrisome in the context of asymptomatic infection. We performed a cross-sectional study looking at asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection in HCWs. We screened asymptomatic HCWs for SARS-CoV-2 via PCR. Complementary viral genome sequencing was performed on positive swab specimens. A seroprevalence analysis was also performed using multiple assays. Asymptomatic health care worker cohorts had a combined swab positivity rate of 29/5776 (0.50%, 95%CI 0.32–0.75) relative to a comparative cohort of symptomatic HCWs, where 54/1597 (3.4%) tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 (ratio of symptomatic to asymptomatic 6.8:1). SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence among 996 asymptomatic HCWs with no prior known exposure to SARS-CoV-2 was 1.4–3.4%, depending on assay. A novel in-house Coronavirus protein microarray showed differing SARS-CoV-2 protein reactivities and helped define likely true positives vs. suspected false positives. Our study demonstrates the utility of routine screening of asymptomatic HCWs, which may help to identify a significant proportion of infections.

Funder

Government of Ontario

Toronto General and Western Hospital Foundation

Mount Sinai Hospital and University Health Network Academic Medical Organization

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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