The infectious diseases clinical research program acute respiratory infection repository protocol: Opportunities to understand current and future epidemics
Simon D. Pollett, Rhonda E. Colombo, Stephanie A. Richard, Tahaniyat Lalani, Brianne Barton, Allison Malloy, Anthony Fries, Edward Parmelee, Scott Merritt, Mark Fritschlanski, Edward E. Mitre, Eric D. Laing, Kathleen Pratt, Eric C. Garges, Katrin Mende, Mark Simons, Brian Agan

TL;DR
This paper describes a large-scale repository combining data and samples from multiple respiratory infection studies to better understand and respond to current and future epidemics.
Contribution
The paper introduces a unified repository protocol that pools data and specimens from nine ARI studies for broad, standardized research use.
Findings
The repository includes data and biospecimens from over 26,000 participants across multiple ARI studies.
The pooled resource supports rapid assay development and sample size estimation for future studies and clinical trials.
The protocol enables analyses on a wide range of outcomes, including vaccine effectiveness and immune responses.
Abstract
Acute respiratory infections (ARI) are a major cause of morbidity and lost workdays in both military and non-military populations. To better understand these infections and their outcomes, the Infectious Diseases Clinical Research Program has enabled nine major ARI clinical research protocols in the last decade, including observational studies and trials, spanning emerging and reemerging ARI threats including Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2, influenza, adenovirus, entero/rhinovirus, human metapneumovirus, respiratory syncytial virus, and other pathogens. These protocols have resulted in epidemiological, clinical and laboratory data and biospecimens from over 26,000 participants, most of whom were beneficiaries of a geographically distributed Military Health System. The Acute Respiratory Infection Repository Protocol establishes a unique Department of Defense (DoD)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory viral infections research · SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research · Viral Infections and Outbreaks Research
