RDL logo
About
Aims and ScopeAdvisory Board Members
More
Who We Are?
User Guide
​
​
Sign inGet started
​
​

About
Aims and ScopeAdvisory Board Members
More
Who We Are?
User Guide

Sign inGet started
RDL logo

Verified research datasets. Instant access. Built for collaboration.

Navigation

About

Aims and Scope

Advisory Board Members

More

Who We Are?

Add Raw Data

User Guide

Legal

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Support

Got an issue? Email us directly.

Email: info@rawdatalibrary.netOpen Mail App
​
​

© 2025 Raw Data Library. All rights reserved.
PrivacyTerms
  1. Raw Data Library
  2. /
  3. Publications
  4. /
  5. Nodal analysis determined nasal mucosal-associated mediators were associated with accelerated clinical recovery from SARS-CoV-2 infection

Verified authors • Institutional access • DOI aware
50,000+ researchers120,000+ datasets90% satisfaction
Article
en
2023

Nodal analysis determined nasal mucosal-associated mediators were associated with accelerated clinical recovery from SARS-CoV-2 infection

0 Datasets

0 Files

en
2023
DOI: 10.1183/13993003.congress-2023.pa4586

Get instant academic access to this publication’s datasets.

Create free accountHow it works

Frequently asked questions

Is access really free for academics and students?

Yes. After verification, you can browse and download datasets at no cost. Some premium assets may require author approval.

How is my data protected?

Files are stored on encrypted storage. Access is restricted to verified users and all downloads are logged.

Can I request additional materials?

Yes, message the author after sign-up to request supplementary files or replication code.

Advance your research today

Join 50,000+ researchers worldwide. Get instant access to peer-reviewed datasets, advanced analytics, and global collaboration tools.

Get free academic accessLearn more
✓ Immediate verification • ✓ Free institutional access • ✓ Global collaboration
Access Research Data

Join our academic network to download verified datasets and collaborate with researchers worldwide.

Get Free Access
Institutional SSO
Secure
This PDF is not available in different languages.
No localized PDFs are currently available.
Peter J Barnes
Peter J Barnes

Imperial College London

Verified
Steven P. Cass
Jonathan Baker
Christine Mwasuku
+8 more

Abstract

The inflammatory environment which protects against viral infections such as SARS-CoV-2 is dynamic. Elucidating the interaction of immune mediators will provide insight into disease pathogenesis and assist the development of therapeutics to treat disease caused by viral insults. Using previously published upper respiratory tract network analysis, we dissected clinical symptom severity (FLU-PRO questionnaire) and self-reported clinical recovery based on immune node clusters from 139 participants in a community-based randomised clinical trial in early onset SARS-CoV-2 (The STOIC study, NCT04416399). Primary outcome events reported included urgent care, emergency department visit or hospitalisation for COVID-19. Nodes at study enrolment were defined as interferon, innate immunity-like, chemokine-dominant, and mucosal immunity-like. Participants were stratified based on viral burden (30-cycle thresholds) and treatment (budesonide or usual care) with node expression also compared to 22 healthy controls. Interferon and chemokine node expression increased dependent on viral burden as compared to health, as expected. Elevated IL-33, CCL26, CCL13, CCL17 and IL-5 expression in the mucosal node (p=0.0163) was associated with a mean 3.7-day quicker clinical recovery with no primary outcome events irrespective of treatment. Symptom severity differences were specific to nasal (p=0.0264) and throat (p=0.0020) symptoms at day 0 only in high mucosal node expressing participants. Overall, these data offer insight into mucosal mediators key to the control and swift symptom resolution of SARS-CoV-2 which can be utilised for future therapeutics. 

How to cite this publication

Steven P. Cass, Jonathan Baker, Christine Mwasuku, Sanjay Ramakrishnan, Mahdi Mahdi, Peter J Barnes, Louise Donnelly, Richard Russell, Dan V. Nicolau, Rocío T. Martínez-Nuñez, Mona Bafadhel (2023). Nodal analysis determined nasal mucosal-associated mediators were associated with accelerated clinical recovery from SARS-CoV-2 infection. , DOI: https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.congress-2023.pa4586.

Related publications

Why join Raw Data Library?

Quality

Datasets shared by verified academics with rich metadata and previews.

Control

Authors choose access levels; downloads are logged for transparency.

Free for Academia

Students and faculty get instant access after verification.

Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2023

Authors

11

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1183/13993003.congress-2023.pa4586

Join Research Community

Access datasets from 50,000+ researchers worldwide with institutional verification.

Get Free Access