Professor David Harris, Phd describes the Test, Trace, Treat Strategy that was implemented at the University of Arizona in the Fall of 2020.
Professor David Harris and his team at the University of Arizona in the USA have provided proof of concept of Dr Michael Mina’s research and advocacy of Rapid testing as a means of reducing SARS-CoV-2 transmission of infection during the pandemic.
They have also shown how the 360 degree solution to pandemic control can work in a real life scenario by actively implementing most of the risk reduction methods, facilitating a path of living with COVID-19 safely whilst getting back to a form of normal life again.
Watch the full interview here: https://youtu.be/XF5dHEgxYfg
Learn more at: https://kojalamedical.com/covid19theanswers/
Kojala Medical presents COVID-19 the answers the show that delivers the scientific evidence-based
Speaker:knowledge that can safely return us all to our pre-COVID lives. My name is Dr. Funmi Okunola and
Speaker:I'll be hosting the show every week you can listen to me interview a highly respected professional
Speaker:about the science that can reduce your risk of becoming infected with this coronavirus.
Speaker:Hello and welcome to COVID 19 the answers, Episode 8 Part 2 - Accounts of rapid testing in the field.
Speaker:Today I'd like to introduce you all to Professor David Harris, PhD. Professor Harris is the
Speaker:Executive Director of the University of Arizona Biorepository, a Professor of Immunobiology,
Speaker:Medicine and of the B105 Institute at the University of Arizona in the USA.
Speaker:Professor Harris is a graduate of Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina where
Speaker:he obtained Bachelor of Science degrees (cum laude) in Biology, Mathematics and Psychology
Speaker:in 1978. He earned a Masters of Medical Sciences (summa cum laude) from Bowman
Speaker:Gray Medical School in 1980 and his Doctorate in Microbiology and Immunology
Speaker:(magna cum laude) from Bowman Gray Medical School in 1982.
Speaker:Professor Harris’s research interests include stem cells and regenerative medicine,
Speaker:cancer research & stem cell transplantation and gene therapy. He established the
Speaker:first cord blood bank in the USA in 1992. Welcome! Thank you very much for inviting me.
Speaker:David out of interest and for the audience could you please explain what a biorepository is
Speaker:and what is the b105 institute? Sure, the biorepository is a large collection of
Speaker:biospecimens like blood serum plasma biopsies tissue in our particular instance it's all
Speaker:clinical related, so we don't do animals or plants or only from patients in our particular instance,
Speaker:it's clinically annotated biospecimens so that we have the electronic health records that go along
Speaker:with specimens so we can look longitudinally to see what is going on in terms of patient
Speaker:diagnosis, patient treatment, patient response and correlate that with the biospecimens that
Speaker:we have in our facility and essentially the facility is a large collection of freezers and
Speaker:liquid nitrogen doers and other types of apparatus for storing those samples in an organized fashion,
Speaker:so that we can provide them to individuals who are interested in research as well as provide them
Speaker:with de-identified data that goes along with those particular samples. Now the bio5 institute is
Speaker:a sort of a consortium across disciplinary consortium of investigators at the University
Speaker:that goes through five different disciplines, which is clinical plant, animal research and
Speaker:some others molecular biology and they're sort of placed in one large building so they have
Speaker:an opportunity to run into each other and then potentially talk about collaborations
Speaker:and facilitate the type of interactions that would normally come in a departmentally based setting.
Speaker:So that's fantastic and pioneering research there. thank you for sharing that.
Speaker:Ok, so let's continue.
Speaker:So we've talked about rapid testing with Dr Michael Mina,
Speaker:today I want to show an example of how a program of mass testing worked in a real life situation.
Speaker:Between the fall of 2020 and April 2021 using a test trace and treat strategy, under the leadership
Speaker:of Professor David Harris the University of Arizona went from four percent of people on campus
Speaker:testing positive for COVID 19 to less than half a percent. This corresponds to 4,172 people testing
Speaker:positive in August 2020 to four people in March 2021. The University began the pandemic with 45,000
Speaker:students and 20,000 staff working online to resumption of in-person classes with one
Speaker:hundred people in attendance per classroom within seven months. This was a remarkable achievement
Speaker:because if you can remember the COVID vaccines did not become available until December 2020
Speaker:and a lot of national and international universities remained closed to in-person
Speaker:classes for up to a year or longer on march the 11th 2020 the world hall health organization
Speaker:declared the novel Coronavirus COVID-19 outbreak a global pandemic so David could you please tell
Speaker:the audience what happened at the University of Arizona after that announcement and what
Speaker:you and your colleagues decided to do? Right, it actually seems that's a long time ago now
Speaker:when you when you talk about 4% actually there was a time when it was above 11%
Speaker:positivity at the beginning and then dropped down below 1%, but I can remember
Speaker:that March of of 2000 of 2020, when the results were coming back from the rapid spread
Speaker:of the infection the health consequences the astounding number of deaths that were occurring
Speaker:we didn't really have any antivirals, we didn't have any real treatments, didn't have a vaccine,
Speaker:so where we, like everybody else was trying to decide what to do and the University stepped in
Speaker:and decided to go to remote learning. As you didn't want to shut the University, but you actually
Speaker:couldn't take the chance of doing teaching in person, so everything went to remote learning.
Speaker:We, at the buyer repository were asked to come up with testing kits to be able to test the campus
Speaker:community, so we spent a lot of time in the early days constructing PCR
Speaker:kits, collection kits going out and collecting samples and looking at prevalence of the
Speaker:of the virus in the community and that was the point where we decided that was not going to be
Speaker:an easy way to mitigate the infection because it simply took too long to get results back
Speaker:and so we we then spent a lot of time trying to decide what kind of rapid tests we could,
Speaker:could develop or could implement to be able to get results back quickly
Speaker:because obviously, I don't think people realize that if you have no students, you have no money.
Speaker:If you have no money, you have no University. Regardless of how many good people you have
Speaker:at the University and so if you send everybody home and they're not paying for for books, or for
Speaker:rent, or for their their classes, essentially your Universities can go bankrupt very quickly and
Speaker:we're talking about tens, to hundreds of millions of dollars per University that that they're losing
Speaker:and so we were trying to implement as as much as possible a way to get classes open
Speaker:in some respect and that's where we we came up with this test and treat plan to be able to
Speaker:slowly reintegrate the community back so that we could have people on campus individuals who
Speaker:were working in laboratories that would be able to come back nih grants would continue to go forward
Speaker:but in a safe manner to be able to protect those individuals who would be most likely to come in
Speaker:contact with the virus that unfortunately was my group at the beginning when we say unfortunately
Speaker:because we didn't really know how serious that was going to be and so we from march until today
Speaker:we've been at the university doing that sort of work fantastic so
Speaker:in the fall of 2020 well I thought it was four percent you're saying actually ten percent
Speaker:actually it was over 11% at one point, there was a couple weeks
Speaker:when the kids were coming back that it got up over 11%, it mirrored the surrounding community
Speaker:90% of the of the students live off campus inside of the city's community, so you expect their
Speaker:incidents to be very similar and it was at the beginning until we could go in and test and trace
Speaker:and emphasize to people how to take the precautions to prevent spread of the virus.
Speaker:so I mean so over 11% out of a population of 65 000. So at that time SARS-CoV-2 had an
Speaker:R0 of 2 to 3 so every one person infected would go on to infect another two to
Speaker:three people. Could you please give us some idea how quickly things would have got out of control
Speaker:without your test, trace, treat strategy? Well that was what we realized at the beginning we
Speaker:brought together Epidemiologists, Public Health specialists, the former Surgeon General of the
Speaker:United States, as well as the researchers on campus to try to determine the best approach to try to
Speaker:mitigate it really simply wasn't enough to be able just to measure prevalence because the R0
Speaker:was so high that by the time you knew who was infected, or not, they'd already infected
Speaker:other individuals. So the idea was how could we implement a testing strategy where we could get
Speaker:results back within an hour or so, so that an individual could come in, they could be tested
Speaker:and they could be held sort of in isolation until the test results came back within the hour and
Speaker:then you could then let them go with that, at that point, so we looked around at that point because we
Speaker:needed to replace the PCR results which generally would take 24 to 48 hours to get results back
Speaker:even though you could if you could upscale it to be able to do thousands a day it was just that
Speaker:lag time to be able to get results back and when you talk about 20 year olds that's a long time.
Speaker:They don't want to be kept in isolation for 24 to 48 hours. So we looked at the rapid tests that
Speaker:were coming out at the time we evaluated various manufacturers and we went went out and purchased
Speaker:tests to be able to do our own in-house validation and we settled upon the cadell the rapid antigen
Speaker:test we liked it for a variety of reasons you get results within 15 minutes but more importantly it
Speaker:was designed to scale up so that we could do the thousands of tests today that we needed to
Speaker:it was connected to the to the web so that we could upload data into patient
Speaker:records so their test results would be in their electronic health record
Speaker:and we could download the data into our own databases to be able to follow the course of the
Speaker:of the infection and see how infected individuals were so we decided on that that was a strategy we
Speaker:set up during that that first summer so when you think about it of of that first spring semester
Speaker:everybody was still sort of fumbling through it trying to do the best we could it wasn't until
Speaker:we got into the summer that we could take the strategy that I talked about
Speaker:we first implemented it with the athletic teams that were at the university the football team
Speaker:the basketball team sort of on a small scale we're only dealing with hundreds of people
Speaker:how would that work how many days a week did you have to test how quickly did you have to get test
Speaker:results back so that when the kids came back in in the fall of that that year we were set up to
Speaker:be able to test thousands a day and so we decided on the strategy of test everybody as they came
Speaker:back to campus get the results back to them so we were testing two to three thousand a day and
Speaker:get results back to them immediately those that were infected immediately pull out the quarantine
Speaker:those that weren't you were allowed to go to their dorm come back to class come into a research lab
Speaker:and then implement a strategy where okay you're you're not infected today but what about tomorrow
Speaker:and so it was the strategy of testing once a week going forward to be able to catch those
Speaker:individuals who previously were naive and now they'd become infected before it could get out
Speaker:of control and part of that had to do with tracing so that if we knew that you were positive we don't
Speaker:know who you talked with the last the last couple of days and so through a de-identified smartphone
Speaker:app we could tell when your smartphone get that coast to another smartphone
Speaker:although we didn't know who owned the smartphones but we could tell the other smartphone that
Speaker:you just were around an effective person and you should get tested and that allowed us to
Speaker:trace those individuals and encourage them to take steps to protect their own health and then
Speaker:we followed that up by doing wastewater testing of the individual dormitories in congregate settings
Speaker:where it was not really feasible to go in and do that every day but at least to give us sort
Speaker:of an idea of is there virus present in the building and how much virus and then we could
Speaker:go in and target those areas like the fifth floor of the dormitory or the cafeteria clean that out
Speaker:test all those individuals and then re-educate them as to best ways to prevent infections so
Speaker:it was a multi-pronged approach that that really I can't emphasize enough that really depended upon
Speaker:the sort of the push or the motivation of higher administration because it takes a lot of people
Speaker:and it takes a lot of money and a lot of effort to be able to do that where a lot of the universities
Speaker:were simply closing their doors and going home or just going online our our university made the
Speaker:decision that we would actually try to stay as true to a normal university as possible
Speaker:and through federal funding for mitigation and for testing we were able to do that in a much better
Speaker:extent than many of the our fellow universities both here and elsewhere were able to do.
Speaker:It was an amazing feat really and to be it's something that needs to be emulated globally
Speaker:in my opinion, that's why I'm featuring it this your whole experience on this podcast
Speaker:so you've really told the whole story but I'm going to go through
Speaker:I'm going to go through a series of questions that kind of expand on on what you've what you've said.
Speaker:So basically you and your colleagues devised a timeline for the University of
Speaker:Arizona to get back to full in-person learning. Can you please describe this to the audience?
Speaker:So the idea was, when your infection rates were high up in there 10%- 11%.
Speaker:Obviously everything is closed down other than the essentials, like the testing laboratories
Speaker:and what you want to be able to do is as people come to campus and it was requirements
Speaker:you want to come on the campus for any purpose, whether it was research, classrooms, work, whatever.
Speaker:You had to be tested and then you had to be follow-up tested through the course of the year
Speaker:and so the idea was if we could find the effective individuals at first glance when they came on we
Speaker:could isolate them and provide them with all the necessary things they needed like internet access
Speaker:meals that sort of thing until they recovered and we needed to be able to do that fairly rapidly
Speaker:and so that was where the rapid test came in that we could we could set up a testing
Speaker:venue over in our student union where we could handle thousands of people a day
Speaker:some of them would get PCR just to give us an idea of the prevalence but the rest would get
Speaker:a rapid antigen test to look for a mitigation strategy and our and what our results our papers
Speaker:had shown was that PCR was great for detecting the virus but it's not great for telling you
Speaker:who's at risk of infecting others because it's so sensitive so we were using PCR as sort of a
Speaker:prevalent strategy where is it or where has it been what should we be looking for and that goes
Speaker:with the wastewater testing as well and we use the rapid engine test because we and others had shown
Speaker:that it doesn't pick up everybody who's positive but it picks up the ones who are contagious
Speaker:and that's what we were concerned about is to isolate those who are contagious and then let
Speaker:them recover and once they recover they'll still be positive by PCR which is a problem
Speaker:because they're no longer have active virus and that's where the antigen test came in so we did
Speaker:we just looked at it the other day probably during that time period well over 300,000 tests
Speaker:and so when you think every one of those tests cost $23. That's a tremendous investment to be able
Speaker:to keep the university open, by the university. As well as not not even counting the personnel costs
Speaker:that are involved, so we made that decision that if we could keep them as as unaffected as possible
Speaker:and that worked out pretty well, or at least find them pretty quickly. We could see the infection
Speaker:rates come down and that's what we saw over the of that that year, was that the infection rates
Speaker:gradually got down to where they were below what you would find out in the community
Speaker:which was still averaging in the 7%- 8% range and we were well below 1%, so
Speaker:the education actually worked because they were still out living in the community there still
Speaker:was no vaccine at the time or antivirals but I think they had taken it to heart that if you
Speaker:do something stupid and people will you will get infected. We will catch you when you come on campus
Speaker:and you'll no longer be able to go to class, or go to the lab or do the other things
Speaker:that that you're paying to do as a college student so I think that was sort of the
Speaker:the stick and the carrot thing that we expect you to act like adults but if you don't, then
Speaker:we will we will catch you during the testing. Yeah I mean, the whole program was ingenious frankly.
Speaker:It's something as I've said I'm repeating myself that needs to be emulated, so
Speaker:yes there were costs, but the cost of that that you the cost of implementing the strategy,
Speaker:were far below the cost of loss and I think that's what people struggle with getting their
Speaker:head around. You have to pay for things like testing, air filtration, ventilation, whatever
Speaker:in order to stay open, so that in the long run you don't economically lose and also so that you keep
Speaker:your population safe. So you you've really shown here a true proof of concept. Well I think when we
Speaker:looked at this early on, before employment. We were expecting the university that year would lose
Speaker:somewhere upwards of $40 to 60 million dollars and it turned out at the end of the year with doing
Speaker:this type of strategy. We still lost money, but it was less than $10 million. Wow. Now we're it's kind
Speaker:of like monopoly money oh it's only 10 million but so I mean it really did cut our expected
Speaker:losses. We still lost, but not as much as if we'd done nothing and more importantly it it sort of
Speaker:showed the students and staff and the faculty that the university was it
Speaker:was concerned about their health, was making every effort and so people were more willing
Speaker:to come back. Because then people get to the point where they go well if 'I'm doing everything online
Speaker:why pay all the money to do that why not go somewhere else,' but here they could actually
Speaker:start to come back and the classes would open up in small numbers first essential laboratories then
Speaker:small classes where you had 25 or 30, then you have classes of 50 to the point finally you get to full
Speaker:size classes where there's no restrictions. But it was great it was phased in and there were metrics
Speaker:that had to be met and if you didn't meet the metrics you could go backwards or forwards depending
Speaker:on what the results were. So how did you get the university staff and students on board with your
Speaker:your plans? Could you tell us about things like the dashboard of testing results? Well the dashboard is
Speaker:is sort of the community facing the public facing website to be able to show what's going on at
Speaker:the university and what the infection rates are, because parents are concerned about their kids as
Speaker:as well as the students themselves are concerned and then you have the interaction with the state
Speaker:officials the governor the Public Health that sort of thing. So the dashboard is more or less set up
Speaker:to show what's going on on a day-to-day real-time basis are we having a surge like out in the
Speaker:community or are we doing well so that was good pr that worked very well people went to that we held
Speaker:press conferences with the president every day during the hot year and the high part of this
Speaker:so that he would answer questions with the media and with the government that we did a lot of of
Speaker:outreach to the students over that summer to say we're going to open back up this is how we're
Speaker:going to do it this is how you're going to do the testing etc and if you want to we can't make you
Speaker:but if you want to live in the dorm if you want to come back on campus you want to see
Speaker:your friends again these are the things that you're going to have to do and if if you get
Speaker:infected we've got a dorm over here that we'll move you into for the next 10 days, provide you
Speaker:with your internet, provide you with your meals, everything you would if you were in your own dorm
Speaker:and when you recover and test out you can go back knowing that you're you're actually have some
Speaker:immunity and you should be okay. So again it's it's sort of a stick and carrot that here you want to
Speaker:come back here's how we're going to do it and then the most important thing was the dashboard would
Speaker:show that it was working so I think that's key I mean you don't want to be draconian about it then
Speaker:then have it not work now it actually showed that with these sort of reasonable
Speaker:interventions on a day-to-day basis you could actually see that that the case rate was going
Speaker:down hospitalizations were going, down deaths were going down and people didn't start to believe it.
Speaker:So you basically showed openness and honesty and that's how you got people on board
Speaker:participating and you educated them? A lot of outreach I think obviously, this is a community
Speaker:that's always very open. The university community of people talk a lot they want to be broadcast,
Speaker:their findings, their results, so if you tried to hide it it was not going to work.
Speaker:So and particularly the people who work for me and for some of the other places things
Speaker:were going badly that meant we were at risk of getting sick and or having bad outcomes so,
Speaker:we definitely weren't going to hide it if things were going south we'd know it very quickly and
Speaker:we would say hey let's close up shop and maybe we do have to to sit it out for a while luckily
Speaker:that never happened. Good. So the next stage of your program you've, I mean you touched on this,
Speaker:was a decision of who to test and when so different groups of students pose different risks
Speaker:of infection to themselves and others dependent on their activities can you please share how you
Speaker:identified groups to be tested and the frequency of testing? It goes back to our first proof
Speaker:of concept with the athletic teams. We had the football team, which had a couple hundred people
Speaker:on it and we broke those up into small pods we had seen what had gone on at the University of Alabama
Speaker:where all their players would congregate together to do their weightlifting, their training, that sort
Speaker:of thing and when one ended up getting sick they infected 50 or 60 others. So then everything shut
Speaker:down. So we broke them up into small manageable groups of 10 and they stayed with their pot of
Speaker:10 as we followed them through the summer and did testing almost every day for these people.
Speaker:So we could show that if you if you would test in the groups you could quickly find who was going to
Speaker:be positive or who was going to be a problem and that was sort of the approach that that we took.
Speaker:Was that high congregate settings like dormitories, or like the cafeteria, those are your highest risk
Speaker:places and so you have to go in and test everybody and you have to test them every every other day
Speaker:for those who lived off campus after we initially did the screening they only generally were seeing
Speaker:two or three other people whether it was their girlfriend or their spouse or their roommates
Speaker:there you could test them about once a week and if you had three or four people and they would test
Speaker:on different days you could sort of cover the entire apartment by by doing a kind of testing
Speaker:and then you could back this up by doing random PCR testing out in the community to
Speaker:see if there are any hot spots and then you could do the waste water testing because if somebody
Speaker:in the building was infected it would show up in the wastewater that's highly sensitive
Speaker:and so you could again use a sort of a preview and this was always the goal was to was to
Speaker:know what was going on before it got to the hospitals because the hospitalization rate
Speaker:was was somewhere around two weeks behind the infection rate and then the deaths were another
Speaker:10 days or so behind that so if you merely were tracking hospitalizations or admissions you were
Speaker:really behind the curve and trying to get a handle on how to mitigate this disease.
Speaker:Ingenious. Your whole method of organization and approach to this was truly excellent.
Speaker: Speaker:Could you also talk about the importance of turnaround time with relation to the time you would aim to
Speaker:deliver a result in this population well that was the key thing was that if you if you tell
Speaker:the kids when they come back to class and before they come to move into the dormitory we're going
Speaker:to test you have to be negative you can't tell them but you're going to have to wait somewhere
Speaker:for two or three days till we get the results so not only is that unfair but it's impossible with
Speaker:18 to 20 year old people and so that's where the rapid test comes in if you can scale it up
Speaker:where you can do thousands of tests a day so each of our dormitories holds somewhere between two and
Speaker:five thousand kids so we could bring the entire dorm in on a monday test them all
Speaker:get the results back if we if we staggered them each of them would have results back
Speaker:within the hour and so they would know and so when they would test with with our approach
Speaker:if there was a positive result it notified the students so that they and their parents knew
Speaker:that they were infected it notified campus health so they could immediately go and isolate and then
Speaker:see if they needed to have some sort of health care and then notify the university to know
Speaker:don't let them in the dorm room, don't let them in a congregate setting, because they're
Speaker:infected or vice versa. Everything's all clear and it's ready to go, so that was sort of
Speaker:the key thing there so that we could bring in about 3 000 a day and through the course of an
Speaker:eight hour day we could test all those and get everybody's results back to them within an hour
Speaker:which allowed them to stagger come in and be tested immediately go into the dormitories. Yeah
Speaker:it's fantastic, because I read somewhere in your literature, that with the student population you
Speaker:could have one person who came into contact with up to 200 people within a 24-hour period. So you
Speaker:have this kind of mantra didn't you that 24 hours to deliver a result to a student population is too
Speaker:late. It needed to be delivered sooner? Well, unless when we looked at this and again it's all done
Speaker:in a de-identified fashion so that we can track a cell phone we don't know who the phone belongs to
Speaker:you would find that there are in reality social butterflies The majority of people on campus come
Speaker:into contact with five or six people a day. But then there are others who come into contact with
Speaker:hundreds a day those are the social butterflies and those are the ones you're really worried about
Speaker:because if one of them is positive, they could essentially infect and we saw that from our own
Speaker:experience that one of my technicians. I had a family member passed away due to something else
Speaker:and so they went to the funeral, this was during 2020 and one of his relatives was not feeling
Speaker:well, but didn't want to miss the funeral and came and she infected 23 others. She
Speaker:was positive and resulted in deaths as well. So in a congregate setting with somebody who's hot.
Speaker:It's not just two or three like you said with an R zero of two or three I mean you go around and you
Speaker:hug and kiss the people at the event you could easily get a super spreader event, so
Speaker:we were concerned about those those individuals, who were those social butterflies
Speaker:but you're also concerned that if one person gets five or six others, they get five or six others
Speaker:and the window between getting exposed and showing up as infected is probably three days.
Speaker:So that's where we sort of made the decision to stagger
Speaker:the repeat testing to make sure if we missed it on day one. We'd catch it again by day four if
Speaker:they were truly infected. And back then as we've said the R0 was two to three and with Omicron,
Speaker:we're looking at an R0 of eight to fifteen. You can see how quickly and why it spreads, so
Speaker:devastatingly across the planet. Really. Yeah, and part of that also is is the fact that
Speaker:the uptake on the vaccination was less than hoped for, or are expected, based on the
Speaker:on the demand for it. Now when it was being developed and the more unvaccinated people
Speaker:you have, the more likely you are to develop variance. Now because I think if more people
Speaker:would vaccinate you wouldn't have Omicron, or if Omicron had happened before the original one,
Speaker:the Wuhan strain, this sort of mitigation effort would have been more successful.
Speaker:Now people are so pandemic fatigued they, they really are not concerned, they see
Speaker:that it's not any anymore. It may in fact be less virulent than the original strain and so they've
Speaker:more or less, if you haven't been vaccinated, they've given up the sort of the fight.
Speaker:Okay, that's another debate that we'll have at another time. So exploring what you did, so what
Speaker:incentives, I mean that's a good point actually to bring in this question. What incentives did you
Speaker:build into the strategy to encourage people to keep getting tested when they need to?
Speaker:How did you overcome pandemic fatigue? Well, I mean, early on in the testing phase
Speaker:that first year there wasn't fatigue there was a story in the paper every day,
Speaker:or on the news every day, about people dying and we saw lots and lots of them dying in the ICU
Speaker:and so people were very concerned. They were very afraid, they weren't necessarily
Speaker:going to get vaccinated but, there wasn't the fatigue the fighting is wearing masks
Speaker:and that sort of thing. Again what you're fighting against with with the younger population is
Speaker:the short-sightedness of 'I'm negative today, that means I'll be okay tomorrow'
Speaker:and you try to get them, say this is just a point in time. Tomorrow may be different,
Speaker:or two days from now maybe different, , it's, but if you're living in a dorm, you have no choice ,
Speaker:if you didn't get tested every couple of days you could get expelled from the dorm and
Speaker:you would lose your money and you weren't giving your money back if you didn't follow the rules.
Speaker:If you wanted to be in a lab or on campus you had to do the testing what it was,
Speaker:you wanted to have those who only occasionally came on maybe once every couple weeks who are
Speaker:doing most of their their learning from home, you wanted to get them tested and that's where
Speaker:these sort of motivation strategies of bookstore discounts, tickets to the basketball games,
Speaker:there was a few grand raffles before you get a tuition for the semester free,
Speaker:that sort of thing. And a raffle to try to keep people going and during that first year.
Speaker:That worked very well. I think between , the fear and the motivational strategies,
Speaker:it wasn't a big deal. It's only as it gets into the second year, , and you notice that
Speaker:people don't want it. Some people don't want to get vaccinated and they don't want to
Speaker:take /make efforts to protect themselves that they become concerned.
Speaker:Interestingly for your PCR test you use the saliva direct protocol with the saline
Speaker:gargle from British Columbia in Canada which you found more accurate and faster than a conventional
Speaker:nasopharyngeal PCR test. Another proof of concept we interviewed Dr Anne Wyllie last week about the
Speaker:evolution of this protocol. Are you able to tell us about your experience with this? So one of our
Speaker:investigators, researchers, Michael Warby here comes from British Columbia and so he knows all,
Speaker:the all the people up in British Columbia and has worked with them and so the idea was , so what
Speaker:we did when we were doing proof of concept and we were comparing antigen tests with PCR tests it was
Speaker:all N.P swaps , we tried to do, throats swabs, we we tried to do nasal swabs, we tried to do cheek,
Speaker:just to do anything other than N.P, because people hate to do in N.P swabs. It's just uncomfortable
Speaker:and it's also dangerous to the individuals who are making the collection. So we taught thousands of
Speaker:people how to do their own N.P swabs and so that, I said , I don't know how long your nasal cavity is,
Speaker:so if I just stick that back in there I may injure you. You can slide it back it you won't feel bad,
Speaker:but it'll feel better than if I did it for you. But then the publication of the
Speaker:swish gargle, saline gargle came out Michael Warby brought it back to us. We evaluated it,
Speaker:compared to the N.P. Turned out to be just as sensitive, if not a little bit more. I think
Speaker:it depends on what day and the infection you do that, and so people were very compliant with that
Speaker:to swish you a little saline around in their mouth and spit it into a tube it was very easy
Speaker:to implement that and so that that really helped in terms of the PCR testing. Now people didn't try
Speaker:to cheat on the test, they didn't try to skip their tests they were quite happy to come in and swish a
Speaker:little saline around their mouth and get the test results, yeah. And you combine that with the saliva
Speaker:direct protocol because in BC we still use the traditional RT PCR but you combine that with the
Speaker:new protocol that Anne Wyllie developed. So you have the best of both worlds. That's speed and accuracy.
Speaker:Right and we had to validate all of that and again when you're doing those things up front they have
Speaker:to be validated, they have to be approved by the CAP and the CDC to let you do that diagnostically
Speaker:so it's not something that you can turn around and do overnight.
Speaker:But I think having this research community together we would meet three times a week
Speaker:to try to decide what's going on in a different University or State or a different Country and
Speaker:what have you heard so that we can start to look at some of these things very early on
Speaker:and if something looks like it could be promising we can start to validate it
Speaker:so that it doesn't take us six months to turn around but maybe just three or four weeks
Speaker:and I think that that was key. Again that needs to happen in the real world and that enabled you to
Speaker:have a much faster turnaround time with PCR from what I saw reading? Oh yeah so it cuts a good 24
Speaker:hours off of of the time frame, so that since you don't have to go through and and do the isolation
Speaker:of the message beforehand, but you can immediately go to do an amplification.
Speaker:It's tremendous. Yeah you lose a little bit of sensitivity. Maybe one or two cycles on the PCR,
Speaker:but that doesn't seem to have impacted the biological significance of the asset.
Speaker:Yeah I still fail to understand why that isn't so much more widespread.
Speaker:So there's a difference between being infected with SARS-CoV-2 and infected and contagious you've
Speaker:touched on this that it's important to isolate a contagious person as they can spread the virus
Speaker:to others. An infected person who is no longer contagious will not spread the virus. PCR tests
Speaker:are notorious for giving positive results for weeks after a person is no longer contagious.
Speaker:Could you please explain to the audience what a CT value is and how you use these values alongside
Speaker:rapid antigen tests to identify contagious people and isolate them? Yeah so CT values are I mean
Speaker:are the way that you determine how much virus is present when you do a PCR test so cycle
Speaker:time so do you have to go through the assay 10 times 20 times 30 times before you can detect
Speaker:the virus and obviously the easier or the sooner you can detect it the more virus there is so a CT
Speaker:value of 30, means there's very little virus but a CT value of 10 means there's a whole lot of virus.
Speaker:Complementary to that you we also get similar values on the antigen test so that we can
Speaker:determine how much virus is present when you do the rapid test. So now what we were
Speaker:concerned with and it came from our proof of concept, was that we had we had a couple of
Speaker:people during the athletics contesting, who tested positive week, after week, after week for months
Speaker:and so only by PCR because if we tested them with nasal swabs or N.P swabs but it was with with PC
Speaker:swabs like or with the NP swaps and PCR they kept testing positive and surely if you're positive for
Speaker:this virus six months, you should be dead. I mean it's not that you continue to be environmentally
Speaker:infected, it's a so for whatever reason is unusual RNA virus with an envelope that may hang around
Speaker:for a while, or there may be some cross-reactive proteins in your body that that happen but, again,
Speaker:it's sort of pointed out that it's the PCR test is so sensitive
Speaker:that it's great for looking at prevalence testing but it's not great for mitigation because then
Speaker:you're isolating people who aren't infected . Now on the other side with the androgen test
Speaker:you may get a false negative, but if you test two days later you'll you'll find that
Speaker:person will show up as positive what you're concerned about is the false positive that
Speaker:somebody tests positive, but they're actually negative and then you isolate them in a big
Speaker:dorm full of real positive people and then they might get sick and so we put together a
Speaker:testing strategy that allowed us to identify the false positives by by using a threshold of how
Speaker:how positive you had to be on the energy test to really be a positive so we were able to eliminate
Speaker:false positives and use that as our strategy for looking at who was contagious and then we
Speaker:could use the PCR for looking at where the virus has been and where we think it it may be next.
Speaker:So with CT values, I think you had a cut off if that your CT value was below 30, then you were
Speaker:contagious and that would often correlate with the positivity of the antigen test because they work
Speaker:during it they register positive when you're actually contagious. They won't tell whether you've
Speaker:ever been infected and then if your PC your CT value was above 30 on PCR then even if it kept
Speaker:testing you kept testing positive on PCR you would know that that person is no longer contagious?
Speaker:Right and we looked at that in terms of trying to isolate live virus from these individuals
Speaker:we could never get live virus to isolate or grow out of people with CT values above 30.
Speaker:that helped us to make that decision because it's not something we make lightly that you're
Speaker:infected but you're not or contagious, that we could actually have real data to show if you
Speaker:had a CT above 30 you had been infected you're now recovered or almost recovered you're not a concern
Speaker:to the public. Whether it's grandma if you see them at home or your roommate in the dorm, but if you're
Speaker:under 30 then yes we were concerned and we wanted not only to pull you out of of the community, but
Speaker:we actually want to put you in a place where we can watch you to see if you have a bad outcome
Speaker:because if you start to go south, we want to be able to intervene and if we don't know who you are
Speaker:or where you're at we can't do that. Fantastic.
Speaker:So what did you learn from the whole experience can you summarize the important points that you learned?
Speaker:Well I think collaboration of people who have
Speaker:multi-disciplinary expertise really was sort of key to this that actually has allowed us
Speaker:to set up what we call the Aegis Institute at the University to in expectation of the next pandemic
Speaker:we expect either this one will continue somewhat or be another one so everybody has different
Speaker:expertise and if you're able to bring them to collaborate work together you can do a lot of
Speaker:of incredible things the test the treat the trace is sort of key it's it's not a cheap endeavor
Speaker:but it really does make I think a significant be a difference by being able to do that sort
Speaker:of thing so, we think the testing obviously tells you who's infected or not who might be contagious
Speaker:the tracing to let who they might have been exposed to or exposed themselves to so that
Speaker:we can now know who needs to be isolated and or treated and I think that that's the other thing
Speaker:as well as we want to make sure that we identify those who might have a bad outcome and try to take
Speaker:advantage of that early decision to be able to say okay we think we can help you through our approach
Speaker:so where are you now how did COVID vaccination change your approach to reducing the risk of
Speaker:infection on campus well we've done a lot of vaccinations and actually we've probably done
Speaker:now again over 300,000 back vaccinations but we we are the biobank of the biorepository
Speaker:is also the place that receives distributes and attracts the vaccination in our our
Speaker:our community so we're at the point now where the university is back to 100 no
Speaker:masking now is required even indoors because the infection rate is well below a half percent and
Speaker:part of that and that's also true of the community so if the community goes above
Speaker:I want to say it goes above a half percent or so, we would have to go back to masking indoors
Speaker:but at present both the university and the community have such low
Speaker:positivity rates, whether it's true infections or breakthrough infections,
Speaker:that we're no longer required even in the community as well as on campus,
Speaker:to have masking. Some people do and I'm sure some people will continue to do that for a long time,
Speaker:but we're continuously monitoring on campus, as well as wastewater, as well as in the community,
Speaker:just to try to be ahead of the curve if there is a surge coming but at this point after two years
Speaker:either from caution vaccination or infection, we think probably
Speaker:eighty percent of the people have been exposed in one fashion or another and that probably helps to
Speaker:explain why we can now get back to almost what it was before pre-pandemic so what's the vaccination
Speaker:rate on a COVID vaccination rate on campus at the university of Arizona of the students this is
Speaker:completely optional what I thought. The students is probably 85% or higher. The people who I thought
Speaker:would be most at risk in which we tend to be faculty and staff it's probably 60 percent.
Speaker:And what's the rate of vaccination in the wider community outside of the university? It's about
Speaker:60%- 65%. Okay so are you still rapid testing and PCR testing? Yeah but just not at the numbers. So
Speaker:most of it is if there is a surge or if there is an outbreak, we'll go in and specifically test
Speaker:those areas like say the athletic teams, or it's volunteer testing. Somebody says
Speaker:I was away for spring break, or I came back from visiting so and so, my throat is sore today,
Speaker:I'll get a test before I go on the campus. But the mandatory testing is no longer required and that's
Speaker:another important question that I forgot to ask was the testing always free for the students? oh
Speaker:yeah. Right. That's where the university spent all that money was for the free testing because again
Speaker:you had to pay to go through an NP swab you probably wouldn't show up to do it, so we
Speaker:wanted to make it this we have testing sites all over campus want to make it as easy to do it,
Speaker:it's free to do it and you'll get the results back rapidly. So it was an extremely convenient and easy
Speaker:process. Yes and do you have any other mitigation methods in play? Do you have anything like air
Speaker:filtration ventilation? So all these air supplies going into the buildings is through HEPA filters.
Speaker:We have what's called a germ buster team that that goes out that's part of facilities. Anytime there's
Speaker:a positive infection in the in a building a room or a dorm they go out and sanitize there is a
Speaker:team of individuals who will then escort positive individuals over to the quarantine facility so
Speaker:nobody else is exposed so there is quite a bit of of of thought in terms of how to make this work
Speaker:with such a large space particularly once you're outside the classroom it's
Speaker:extremely difficult to do much if people won't wear masks and that's really where that the
Speaker:masking rate was extremely good in that first year year and a half. Well in my opinion, I mean you've
Speaker:created a fantastic infrastructure for reducing the risk of infection to this coronavirus, which
Speaker:is incredibly important because up to a third of people can go on to develop long COVID or
Speaker:post acute sequelae, which really results in organ damage. I mean all the research that's
Speaker:coming out now with even one infection I mean vaccination is thought to possibly reduce that
Speaker:risk by half but that's just still huge numbers of people. So you've really put a whole infrastructure
Speaker:in place that is protecting people from chronic illness in my opinion your whole team should be
Speaker:running the pandemic. Well we have one of those those recover grants to look at long COVID so,
Speaker:I think we're supposed to look at 9,000 and I think overall they're looking at a hundred
Speaker:thousand or something but we do think that vaccination definitely does decrease the risk
Speaker:of developing long COVID, but, and that's sort of the emphasis to tell people that you're young and
Speaker:healthy you probably won't have a bad outcome. I know, I've known a few have had bad outcomes,
Speaker:but a bad outcome is something other than death, a bad outcome is lose 20 iQ points, or have a bad
Speaker:liver, or have cardiovascular problems. Those also are bad outcomes , particularly
Speaker:if you're a 20 year old and you're going to spend the next 80 years with this problem
Speaker:and that's been sort of a difficult cell to convince people that
Speaker:there are bad outcomes, other than dying from the virus that you should be concerned about.
Speaker:Yes and I don't think it's been highlighted enough in the media. I think we need to have
Speaker:really long COVID, post-acute sequalae, results, rates posted, as well as hospitalization rates and
Speaker:death rates so that people understand that this is something that that can really do damage and they
Speaker:need to protect themselves from infection, I mean that's the whole point of this series to highlight
Speaker:cases like yours and the technology that's out there to keep people safe from chronic disease.
Speaker:Yeah I think with you after the first year or so of these NIH grants to look at the long COVID
Speaker:we'll have a better idea of what the rate is for for that and it probably is going to depend on
Speaker:a variety of patient demographics as well as viral loads and things like that so it's,
Speaker:we've seen it reported anywhere from 3 percent to 30 percent so there's there's other factors in
Speaker:there that we haven't identified yet but it I mean there's still going to be enough people who get it
Speaker:that it's a problem otherwise the NIH wouldn't be spending almost a billion dollars to look at this
Speaker:so again people don't want to hear bad news anymore, so I understand but we're going to
Speaker:have to develop better outreach, or at least strategies that we can can educate without scaring.
Speaker:Yes and what I think what you've achieved is actually good news you've proved that with the
Speaker:right infrastructure. Incredibly intelligent and clever people ,motivation and actually caring that
Speaker:we you can get back to some form of near normal life safely by putting all of those mitigation
Speaker:factors in place. I think that's what's really key about this this this whole experience. Yeah
Speaker:I agree and I think again I have to always give thanks to to our upper administration
Speaker:started with the President that he was willing to make that investment and spend those dollars
Speaker:and to put in the effort that he was in on many of our our weekly meetings just to get this going.
Speaker:Yeah I mean it starts at the top and goes all the way down to the students so all of them have to
Speaker:be willing to do it yes so when you say president you mean president of the university don't you? Yes.
Speaker:Yeah okay, I'm just going to share something very quickly with you because we're nearly running out
Speaker:of time because I'd like the audience to see this, so basically this is the 360 solution to
Speaker:pandemic control and you and I have talked about this before that I think needs to be implicated
Speaker:implemented globally we won't get out of this pandemic by boosting our way out of it through
Speaker:vaccination. Vaccination is the most important mitigating tool that we have for COVID
Speaker:19 but it's not the only one and I think you've proved that. And you really now you've I would
Speaker:say you've done proof of concepts of 90% of this you had regulatory support with your President
Speaker:a testing strategy, wastewater monitoring and infrastructure that you created you provided
Speaker:support, during isolation. Contract tracing, education and now the environmental medication with the air
Speaker:filtration and ventilation that you've implemented and you've pushed vaccinations. So it's incredibly
Speaker:commendable what you've done. I appreciate that and luckily it worked. I mean that was
Speaker:actually you can actually show that by doing all this, you can actually get back to almost normal. In
Speaker:fact, where our I would say by the fall it will be back to normal unless something happens but
Speaker:yeah. I know, I would say it was not luck. I would say that it was high intelligence, care
Speaker:and meticulous planning. And I just want to say, because I know we've reached the end of time,
Speaker:thank you David for you and all the team that your work has done and for really showing us the
Speaker:way out of managing this pandemic by your wonderful and excellent example of COVID
Speaker:mitigation at the University of Arizona. It's been a pleasure and a privilege to interview you today.
Speaker:Thank you very much for the invitation, happy to do it. And please join us next
Speaker:week for episode nine SARS-CoV-2 is airborne part 1 with Professor Jose Louis Jimenez
Speaker:Thanks for listening to this week's episode of COVID-19 the answers if you enjoyed the episode
Speaker:please SUBSCRIBE, RATE and REVIEW, and do visit our website kojalamedical.com/covid19theanswers