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| Funder | Medical Research Council |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | King's College London |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start Date | May 06, 2021 |
| End Date | Dec 31, 2024 |
| Duration | 1,335 days |
| Number of Grantees | 17 |
| Roles | Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator; Award Holder |
| Data Source | UKRI Gateway to Research |
| Grant ID | MR/V040162/1 |
While COVID-19 causes minor illness in most people, some individuals develop more severe disease requiring admission to hospital including intensive care. People of South Asian heritage admitted with severe COVID-19 in the UK have a higher death rate than those of other ethnic backgrounds even after adjusting for their age or socioeconomic status. However, death rates for South Asians with COVID-19 appear to be much lower in India than the UK.
This is very surprising given that the health service in India is less comprehensive than the national health service and in India the average socioeconomic conditions are significantly lower than the UK. This unexpected disparity between countries suggests that factors beyond socioeconomic conditions per se are important in determining whether people survive severe COVID-19.
Our understanding of immune priming and activation leads us to propose that biological factors that regulate how the body responds to infection may be very important. The body's immune system is vital in fighting infection. We know that severe COVID-19 is associated with profound abnormalities of the immune response.
Furthermore, severe COVID-19 is accompanied by life-threatening problems with heart and blood vessel function. We propose that differences in immune response and how this impacts on heart and blood vessel function may contribute to the effects of COVID-19 on South Asians in the UK and India. One possibility is that the immune system of people in India is better trained to respond to infection because of continued exposure to a variety of infections and environmental factors that are uncommon in the UK.
A poorer immune response to infection in South Asians in the UK combined with their high underlying rates of diabetes and heart disease may result in worse disease and life threatening complications when they get COVID-19. Such biological factors may therefore account for the disproportionate effects of COVID-19 in South Asians in UK.
We have put together an expert interdisciplinary team of scientists and medical doctors from the UK and India who have outstanding experience in infectious diseases, immunology, heart and blood vessel disorders, and intensive care. Our team will work together to drill down into the problem and prove exactly why COVID-19 affects South Asians in different countries in different ways.
We aim to rapidly identify information that allows us to develop new prevention steps, more targeted monitoring, and hopefully new treatments to improve the outcome of COVID-19 in both India and the UK.
King's College London; St. John'S Medical College; Cbci Society for Medical Education; Indian Institute of Science Iisc; Imperial College London; Public Health Foundation of India (Phfi); University of Edinburgh; Centre for Chronic Disease Control
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