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Studying the pathophysiology of coronavirus disease 2019 - a protocol for the Berlin prospective COVID-19 patient cohort (Pa- COVID-19)

Florian Kurth; Maria Roennefarth; Charlotte Thibeault; Victor M. Corman; Holger Mueller-Redetzky; Mirja Mittermaier; Christoph Ruwwe-Gloesenkamp; Alexander Krannich; Sein Schmidt; Lucie Kretzler; Chantip Dang-Heine; Matthias Rose; Michael Hummel; Andreas Hocke; Ralf H. Huebner; Marcus A. Mall; Jobst Roehmel; Ulf Landmesser; Burkert Pieske; Samuel Knauss; Matthias Endres; Joachim Spranger; Frank P. Mockenhaupt; Frank Tacke; Sascha Treskatsch; Stefan Angermair; Britta Siegmund; Claudia Spies; Steffen Weber-Carstens; Kai-Uwe Eckardt; Alexander Uhrig; Thomas Zoller; Christian Drosten; Norbert Suttorp; Martin Witzenrath; Stefan Hippenstiel; Christoph von Kalle; Leif Erik Sander.
Preprint en Inglés | PREPRINT-MEDRXIV | ID: ppmedrxiv-20092833
PurposeSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has spread worldwide causing a global health emergency. Pa-COVID-19 aims to provide comprehensive data on clinical course, pathophysiology, immunology and outcome of COVID-19, in order to identify prognostic biomarkers, clinical scores, and therapeutic targets for improved clinical management and preventive interventions. MethodsPa-COVID-19 is a prospective observational cohort study of patients with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection treated at Charite - Universitatsmedizin Berlin. We collect data on epidemiology, demography, medical history, symptoms, clinical course, pathogen testing and treatment. Systematic, serial blood sampling will allow deep molecular and immunological phenotyping, transcriptomic profiling, and comprehensive biobanking. Longitudinal data and sample collection during hospitalization will be supplemented by long-term follow-up. ResultsOutcome measures include the WHO clinical ordinal scale on day 15 and clinical, functional and health-related quality of life assessments at discharge and during follow-up. We developed a scalable dataset to (i) suit national standards of care (ii) facilitate comprehensive data collection in medical care facilities with varying resources and (iii) allow for rapid implementation of interventional trials based on the standardized study design and data collection. We propose this scalable protocol as blueprint for harmonized data collection and deep phenotyping in COVID-19 in Germany. ConclusionWe established a basic platform for harmonized, scalable data collection, pathophysiological analysis, and deep phenotyping of COVID-19, which enables rapid generation of evidence for improved medical care and identification of candidate therapeutic and preventive strategies. The electronic database accredited for interventional trials allows fast trial implementation for candidate therapeutic agents.