MediWales LifeStories Magazine 2021

Page 70

Forward thinking health research

Researchers venture into Covid hotspots to recruit patients for unique study Experts involved in a unique COVID-19 study at Morriston Hospital had to go to extreme measures while recruiting patients to the cause. They went way beyond the clichéd image of researchers as people in white coats peering down microscopes in laboratories. Instead, two of the team from the hospital’s Welsh Centre for Emergency Medicine Research donned PPE gear to go into Covid hotspots, including the emergency department and intensive care. There they screened patients to check whether they were suitable and willing to take part, and took blood samples if they were. They then set up a kind of human chain to ensure the blood was taken to the lab for processing without a second’s delay. Around 1,000 patients were screened between October 2020 and the end of January 2021, with the target of 155 patients achieved months early. They provided hundreds of blood samples for the Welsh Government-funded investigation – the only one of its kind in the UK – into one of the most devastating effects of the virus on the body. COVID-19 is known to trigger the formation of abnormal blood clots that may damage organs such as the brain and lungs and could cause life-threatening complications such as stroke. The centre is looking into why this happens, using new biomarkers that the team previously developed with Swansea University to screen patients at risk of thromboembolic disease such as stroke and sepsis. In addition to gaining a better understanding of why the virus causes these abnormal clots, the study will focus on how drugs such as dexamethasone and anticoagulants like heparin affect the disease process and outcome. The study involved screening patients with suspected Covid when they arrived in Morriston Hospital’s Emergency Department. Blood samples were taken from those who agreed to take part, and carried straight to the centre’s laboratory just outside the main ED area.

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Research assistant Jan Whitley and research nurse Jun Cezar Zaldua, who joined the team on secondment last autumn specifically for this study, were at the forefront of the screening and blood sample collection. Jun, wearing full PPE, went into the ‘red’ areas where the Covidsuspected patients had been taken. He explained the research study to them and, if they consented to become involved, took samples of their blood.

“I had to explain to the patients what the research was about and its importance. I really had to communicate to them in a very clear and concise manner. That was the most challenging part. They were struggling to breathe and they didn’t really feel well. Some felt so unwell that they didn’t want to take part. But most of them really wanted to help. They didn’t want others to be in that situation, because they were struggling.” Jun Cezar Zaldua Research Nurse Morriston Hospital

Time was of the essence, as the blood samples had to be taken to the lab before they could clot. Jan waited in ED but outside the red areas for Jun to hand over the samples, which she then took to the lab. Jan explained: “PPE throws up its own difficulties. We always needed a team of three people, someone taking the blood and someone outside of the red area who was still protected but not in full PPE, who could leave and bring the blood samples straight back to the laboratory.” The third person in the chain was the scientist in the laboratory who immediately loaded the samples into a rheometer, a device used to analyse the blood using the centre’s bespoke biomarker. This would

have been either Dr Matthew Lawrence or Professor Karl Hawkins, who undertook specific testing. Not all patients who went through the initial screening could participate in the study even if they wanted to, because certain criteria had to be met. Some who were suspected Covid cases on arrival were subsequently found negative. Others were already on anticoagulants and could not be included as this would have affected the blood test results. Of the 155 patients recruited, 120 came from ED. All follow-up samples were carried out on the wards or in the intensive care unit, depending on where the patients had been moved to. The samples were taken after 24 hours, three to five days and one week, which made it a seven-day operation for the team.

“We collected samples during the evenings and at weekends. Once you have recruited a patient, you need to do the follow-up samples to make sure you’re getting them at the appropriate time. If that meant coming in on a Saturday or Sunday, that’s what we did, along with other members of the team.” Jan Whitley Research assistant Morriston Hospital

Jun said all the staff in ED, intensive care and the wards had been fully cooperative and supportive. That was vital as, without their support, it would have been impossible to complete the study. “They were really accommodating. They wanted us to do the research because they were seeing firsthand the consequences of the disease and how it was affecting patients,” he explained. “It was a sharp learning curve for me and a fantastic experience. I learnt a lot about the methodology of carrying out research in acute illness.”


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Articles inside

Supporting the research response to COVID-19: The COPE Cymru study

2min
pages 72-73

Researchers venture into Covid hotspots to recruit patients for unique study

5min
pages 70-71

Study into antibiotic use wins research paper of the year prize

3min
page 69

€1.5 million project aims to work with 3,000 women to study impact of sex hormone changes on mental health

1min
page 67

How HCEC collaborates to innovate and translate valuable research into practice for patient and public benefit

4min
page 66

Projects developing the next generation of cancer therapeutics

2min
page 68

Achieving the remarkable: supporting and delivering COVID-19 research in Wales

3min
pages 64-65

New investment in the Life Sciences Research Network Wales

2min
page 63

Customised knee implant pioneered by TOKA®, Accelerate and Cardiff University Biomechanics Research Facility

2min
page 62

Design Studio Services help Cortigenix commercialise a new test providing early warning of potential health and fertilify issues

3min
pages 60-61

Taking science to Westminster Welsh biotech firm secures further investment for next-generation cancer therapies

2min
page 58

Harnessing technology to clear the surgical backlog

2min
page 56

Consult Smartly: reducing the outpatient waiting list backlog

3min
page 55

Space2B at The Maltings

1min
page 57

The world’s first ingestible supplement to help manage eczema and dry skin

2min
page 53

RedKnight helps secure grant for med-tech start-up’s rapid COVID-19 diagnostic

2min
page 54

Audit by a data protection authority How does it work?

2min
page 52

NHS and industry collaborate to improve compression garments

2min
page 50

Pandemic musings from Greaves Brewster

4min
page 49

Redefining the field of flexible endoscopy

2min
page 46

Business growth for Cryo Storage Solutions

1min
page 47

Bollé forms partnership with Welsh manufacturer

3min
pages 44-45

Evolve Raybotix UV-C Disinfection Robots at Techniquest

2min
page 48

High quality PPE masks: Made in the UK for the UK

2min
page 42

Blue Stream Academy - Supporting the health and care sector throughout the pandemic and beyond

2min
page 43

Keeping patients safe int he community using a portable 6 lead ECG device

2min
page 41

Facilitating advanced therapies by streamlining the value chain

2min
page 40

Bringing multimodal AI to healthcare

2min
page 38

PCI Pharma’s game-changing digital platform

3min
page 39

Developing breath analysis into a rapid diagnostic

2min
page 37

Safe endoscopy starts with the SNAP Endoscope Guide

2min
pages 32-33

Investment in sustainable manufacturing initiatives

2min
page 36

Scale-up for medical device contract manufacturing in Cardiff

3min
pages 34-35

SolasCure announces £15m Series A raise

2min
page 31

Cytiva: the life sciences company opening a new factory in Cardiff

3min
pages 28-30

Abel + Imray: 150 years protecting ideas

2min
page 27

Celtic connections turn brilliant ideas into practical reality

2min
page 26

Swansea University Academies driving global healthcare transformation

8min
pages 21-25

Respiratory Innovation Wales

3min
page 18

Talking Type 1: Books to support psychological needs of people living with diabetes

2min
page 20

Health Technology Wales

1min
page 19

Innovation that matters: Working with the NHS to improve pregnancy care

3min
page 16

Award winning SBRI Centre of Excellence goes from strength to strength

3min
page 17

Why digital technology is now more important than ever for healthcare in Wales

4min
page 15

Video consulting in NHS Wales rated highly by patients and clinicians

2min
page 13

Digital Health and Care Wales: Technology at the heart of NHS Wales’ response to the pandemic

3min
page 14

Journey to joint QMS accreditation for manufacture of medical devices in two NHS Wales services

2min
page 12

Introducing a locally designed electronic ureteric stent register

4min
page 9

Helping people with mental health problems to find and remain in work

4min
pages 10-11

TriTech Institute supports the development of new healthcare solutions

3min
page 7

Innovative digital bike to encourage exercise

1min
page 8

Velindre Cancer Centre in fluorouracil based chemotherapy genetic screening first

2min
page 6
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