Seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies in a quarantined community after a COVID-19 outbreak

The small community of Neustadt-am-Rennsteig near Jena experienced an outbreak of SARS-CoV-2 in March 2020. Weis et al. conducted a population-based cohort study with 71% of the village population on COVID seroprevalence six weeks after the outbreak, including mandatory PCR testing for all residents. About half of the subjects with PCR confirmed infection had no antibodies – in none of the six different tests used. This calls into question the usefulness of mass antibody testing with current tests and raises new issues regarding T-cell immunity.

Read the full article: https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.07.15.20154112v1

Recent posts

European Group on Immunology of Sepsis

We are a multidisciplinary group consisting of basic scientists, immunologists, infectious diseases and intensive care medicine specialists with a shared primary research interest in sepsis immunology. Our overarching goal is to develop and foster collaborative research by working in partnership with groups with similar interests, Medical and Scientific Societies, Academia and the Industry. 

Categories

Tags

acute medicine awards bioinformatics call for participation campaign congress courses COVID-19 diagnostics education events genetics German Sepsis Society host-microbe interaction immunophenotyping infection immunology innate immunity International Sepsis Forum job opening literature long-term consequences meetings news oddities online learning pathophysiology PhD position pneumonia podcast Postdoc position publications public awareness RCT recommended reading report sepsis treatment sepsis update SIRS subanalysis summer school training Weimar