[MCOH-EH] Use COVID antibody results for return to work management?
Abhijay Karandikar
dr_abhik at yahoo.com
Tue Apr 21 06:41:30 PDT 2020
Great information!
Hope you are doing well.
Thanks,
Abhijay
On Monday, April 20, 2020, 02:15:40 PM EDT, Swift, Melanie D., M.D., M.P.H. via MCOH-EH <mcoh-eh at mylist.net> wrote:
#yiv3681502991 #yiv3681502991 -- _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {}#yiv3681502991 #yiv3681502991 p.yiv3681502991MsoNormal, #yiv3681502991 li.yiv3681502991MsoNormal, #yiv3681502991 div.yiv3681502991MsoNormal {margin:0in;margin-bottom:.0001pt;font-size:11.0pt;}#yiv3681502991 a:link, #yiv3681502991 span.yiv3681502991MsoHyperlink {color:#0563C1;text-decoration:underline;}#yiv3681502991 a:visited, #yiv3681502991 span.yiv3681502991MsoHyperlinkFollowed {color:#954F72;text-decoration:underline;}#yiv3681502991 p.yiv3681502991MsoListParagraph, #yiv3681502991 li.yiv3681502991MsoListParagraph, #yiv3681502991 div.yiv3681502991MsoListParagraph {margin-top:0in;margin-right:0in;margin-bottom:0in;margin-left:.5in;margin-bottom:.0001pt;font-size:11.0pt;}#yiv3681502991 span.yiv3681502991EmailStyle17 {color:windowtext;}#yiv3681502991 span.yiv3681502991EmailStyle18 {color:#1F497D;}#yiv3681502991 .yiv3681502991MsoChpDefault {font-size:10.0pt;} _filtered {}#yiv3681502991 div.yiv3681502991WordSection1 {}#yiv3681502991 _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {} _filtered {}#yiv3681502991 ol {margin-bottom:0in;}#yiv3681502991 ul {margin-bottom:0in;}#yiv3681502991
Good question and one we are all grappling with I think. We have a tool available, but aren’t quite sure if/how/when to use it.
· About 80% of COVID-infected individuals develop IgG by day 14, and almost 100% develop it by day 30.
· Some people with a new positive IgG still have detectable viral RNA by PCR in nasopharyngeal swabs.
· The PCR can’t tell whether that viral RNA represents viable, replication-competent virus; so we have to assume a person who is PCR-positive may be still communicable.
· We don’t yet know whether a positive IgG always represents neutralizing antibody and thus presumptive immunity.
o One study, in preprint and not peer-reviewed, found that 2 macaques who had recovered from COVID-19 and developed IgG were rechallenged 28 days later with the same strain and remained asymptomatic.
o Promising but a far cry from feeling comfortable that we can declare someone immune.
· We don’t know how durable any immunity, if present, lasts.
So my personal take on this is:
· IgG is not helpful in determining safety to RTW.
· IgG may be helpful diagnostically, especially when an individual was not tested with PCR early in their illness course, and now appears to have late complications of COVID-19. The virus may be only replicating in the lower airway and nasal PCR could be negative. An IgM or IgG that was positive would help make the diagnosis.
· If we find evidence of neutralizing antibodies and durable immunity, and we have a vaccine that is in short supply, the test could help us develop a vaccine prioritization.
· If we find evidence of neutralizing antibodies and durable immunity, and we have another wave of hospitalized patients, IgG could help us identify HCP at lower risk, and this could be used in some sort of cohorting strategy.
My 2 cents only,
Melanie
Melanie Swift, MD, MPH
Medical Director, Mayo Clinic Physician Health Center
Associate Medical Director, Occupational Health Service
Senior Associate Consultant
Assistant Professor of Medicine
Division of Preventive, Occupational, and Aerospace Medicine
Phone 507.284.2560
_______________________________
Mayo Clinic
200 First Street SW
Rochester, MN 55905
www.mayoclinic.org
From: MCOH-EH [mailto:mcoh-eh-bounces at mylist.net]On Behalf Of Thorne, Craig
Sent: Monday, April 20, 2020 12:01 PM
To: 'mcoh-eh at mylist.net'
Subject: [EXTERNAL] [MCOH-EH] Use COVID antibody results for return to work management?
Good afternoon everyone,
I am curious about current opinion on how you plan to use COVID antibody results for return to work management?
At this point in the pandemic, we are not requiring home isolation for exposed essential HCWs regardless of their source of exposure.
Given all the literature about the uncertainties with COVID antibody testing, a discussion about this on this list serve could be interesting.
Thank you,
Craig Thorne
Craig D. Thorne, M.D., MPH, MBA
Chief Medical Director, Occupational Medicine and Business Health Services
Yale New Haven Health System
Cell: 203-687-5281
This message originates from the Yale New Haven Health System. The information contained in this message may be privileged and confidential. If you are the intended recipient you must maintain this message in a secure and confidential manner. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender immediately and destroy this message. Thank you.
---------------------------------------
The MCOH-EH List has always been moderated by members of the ACOEM Medical Center Occupational Health Section. It is currently moderated by Joe Fanucchi MD FACOEM.
List membership is free, but only subscribers may post to the list.
To post send messages to: mcoh-eh at mylist.net
To become a subscriber, or to change your subscription options (turn off email while you're on vacation, etc): http://www.mcoh-eh.net
MediTrax / Occupational Health Systems, Inc. provides financial support to ensure the list remains a free resource for the occupational health community.
---------------------------------------
List archives (public): http://mylist.net/archives/mcoh-eh/
---------------------------------------
Send administrative requests to: drjoe at meditrax.com
---------------------------------------
When replying to a message, PLEASE delete all footers, and all messages to which you're NOT replying.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://mylist.net/archives/mcoh-eh/attachments/20200421/ad7ff0c8/attachment-0001.htm>
More information about the MCOH-EH
mailing list