Abstract

Background

Most hospital organizations have had to face the burden of managing the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak. One of the challenges in overcoming the influx of COVID-19 patients is controlling patient-to-staff transmission. Measuring the specific extent of ICU caregiver exposure to the virus and identifying the associated risk factors are, therefore, critical issues. We prospectively studied SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence in the staff of a hospital in Lyon, France, several weeks after a first epidemic wave. Risk factors for the presence of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies were identified using a questionnaire survey.

Results

The overall seroprevalence was 9% (87/971 subjects). Greater exposure was associated with higher seroprevalence, with a rate of 3.2% [95% CI 1.1–5.2%] among non-healthcare staff, 11.3% [8.9–13.7%] among all healthcare staff, and 16.3% [12.3–20.2%] among healthcare staff in COVID-19 units. The seroprevalence was dramatically lower (3.7% [1.0–6.7%]) in the COVID-19 ICU. Risk factors for seropositivity were contact with a COVID-19-confirmed household (odds ratio (OR), 3.7 [1.8–7.4]), working in a COVID-19 unit (OR, 3.5 [2.2–5.7], and contact with a confirmed COVID-19 coworker (OR, 1.9 [1.2–3.1]). Conversely, working in the COVID-19-ICU was negatively associated with seropositivity (OR, 0.33 [0.15–0.73]).

Conclusions

In this hospital, SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence was higher among staff than in the general population. Seropositivity rates were particularly high for staff in contact with COVID-19 patients, especially those in the emergency department and in the COVID-19 unit, but were much lower in ICU staff.

Clinical trial registration NCT04422977

Details

Title
Specific exposure of ICU staff to SARS-CoV-2 seropositivity: a wide seroprevalence study in a French city-center hospital
Author
Vivier, Emmanuel 1   VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Pariset Caroline 2 ; Rio, Stephane 3 ; Armand, Sophie 3 ; Doroszewski Fanny 3 ; Delphine, Richard 3 ; Chardon, Marc 4 ; Romero, Georges 5 ; Metral Pierre 6 ; Pecquet Matthieu 7 ; Didelot Adrien 8 

 Centre Hospitalier Saint Joseph Saint Luc, Medecine Intensive Reanimation, Lyon, France (GRID:grid.489921.f); Centre Hospitalier Saint Joseph Saint Luc, Unite de Recherche Clinique, Lyon, France (GRID:grid.489921.f) 
 Centre Hospitalier Saint Joseph Saint Luc, Maladies Infectieuses, Lyon, France (GRID:grid.489921.f) 
 Centre Hospitalier Saint Joseph Saint Luc, Unite de Recherche Clinique, Lyon, France (GRID:grid.489921.f) 
 Centre Hospitalier Saint Joseph Saint Luc, Medecine du travail, Lyon, France (GRID:grid.489921.f) 
 Centre Hospitalier Saint Joseph Saint Luc, Gestion de La Qualite Et du Risque, Lyon, France (GRID:grid.489921.f) 
 Centre Hospitalier Saint Joseph Saint Luc, Departement D’Information Medicale, Lyon, France (GRID:grid.489921.f) 
 Centre Hospitalier Saint Joseph Saint Luc, Laboratoire de Biologie Medicale, Lyon, France (GRID:grid.489921.f) 
 Centre Hospitalier Saint Joseph Saint Luc, Unite de Recherche Clinique, Lyon, France (GRID:grid.489921.f); Centre Hospitalier Saint Joseph Saint Luc, Service de neurologie, Lyon, France (GRID:grid.489921.f) 
Publication year
2021
Publication date
May 2021
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
e-ISSN
21105820
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2526475280
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2021. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.