PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study finds HEPA purifiers alone may not be enough to reduce viral exposure in schools

In a secondary analysis of a study of 200 classrooms, Mass General Brigham researchers found respiratory viral exposures were still high in those with HEPA purifiers, suggesting additional interventions are needed

2025-10-10
(Press-News.org) In a secondary analysis of a study of 200 classrooms, Mass General Brigham researchers found respiratory viral exposures were still high in those with HEPA purifiers, suggesting additional interventions are needed

School is in session, and viral illness is on the rise. A new study suggests that lowering exposure to respiratory viruses in classrooms isn’t as simple as adding high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) purifiers to the room. In a secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial, investigators from Mass General Brigham and their colleagues found that exposure to respiratory viruses in the air were high, even in classrooms with HEPA purifiers. Their results are published in JAMA Network Open.

“We found that air samples from classrooms included in our study had an average of three different respiratory viruses per classroom, with some having as many as 13, including pathogens capable of causing serious disease such as respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and influenza virus,” said corresponding author Peggy S. Lai, MD, MPH, a physician scientist in the Pulmonary and Critical Care Division in the Mass General Brigham Department of Medicine. “Air purifiers did not reduce overall viral load in classrooms, suggesting that additional interventions may be needed in schools.”

HEPA filters are designed to reduce fine and particulate matter from the air, but there is limited real world data on their effectiveness at filtering respiratory viruses transmitted via aerosols and droplets. In the School Inner-City Asthma Intervention Study (SICAS-2), researchers enrolled elementary school students diagnosed with asthma and attending public schools in the Northeastern U.S. between September 2015 and June 2020.

The original trial examined whether HEPA purifiers in classrooms could reduce asthma symptoms. The students’ 200 classrooms were randomly assigned to receive portable HEPA purifiers or “sham” purifiers (which didn’t have a filter in them). In this secondary analysis, the researchers looked at the concentrations of 19 respiratory viruses in the air, assessing high viral exposure as well as viral diversity.  

The research team detected viruses in 98.4% of air samples from the classrooms. Although they did not detect a decrease in respiratory viral exposure overall for the classrooms with HEPA purifiers, the researchers did see a modest decrease (32.8%) in viral diversity. But this decrease in viral diversity wasn’t associated with a reduction in school absences. The researchers did see a connection between lower humidity and high viral exposure, suggesting that controlling humidity may be an important factor for lowering exposure to certain viruses.

“School-aged children and teachers face increased risks from respiratory viruses, which can impact their health, lead to missed school days, and create challenges for families,” said Lai. “While our study did not find that HEPA air purifiers reduced high viral exposure in classrooms, it’s important to note that the trial was originally designed to measure other outcomes. In addition to air filtration or better ventilation, maintaining classroom humidity between 40% and 60% may help lower viral exposures and improve comfort for students and teachers.”

Authorship: In addition to Lai, Mass General Brigham authors include Dastan Haghnazari, Ching-Ying Huang, Aribah Baig, Minsik Kim, Sophia Zhao, Diane R. Gold, and Leonora Balaj. Additional authors from Boston Children’s Hospital, the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston University, and Columbia University include Ye Sun, Amparito Cunningham, Wanda Phipatanakul Colin Skeen, Erica D. Pratt, Jack M. Wolfson, Stephen T. Ferguson, Linda Valeri, and Petros Koutrakis.

Disclosures: Valeri reported receiving personal fees from Harvard University, University of Michigan, Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam, and Statistical Horizons outside the submitted work. Gold reported receiving grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) during the conduct of the study. Phipatanakul reported receiving nonfinancial support (air purifiers used in the study) from Coway Co Ltd during the conduct of the study and personal fees from AstraZeneca, Regeneron, Sanofi, Genentech, and Novartis outside the submitted work. Lai reported receiving grants from the NIH during the conduct of the study.

Funding: This study was supported by the National Institutes of Health (RO1 AI144119, U01 AI110397, R21 AI178155, R21 AI175965), the American Lung Association (grant COVID 923084). Coway Co Ltd donated the portable air purifiers used in this study.

Paper cited: Sun Y et al. “Air Purifier Intervention for Respiratory Viral Exposure in Elementary Schools A Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Clinical Trial” JAMA Network Open DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.36951

 

###

About Mass General Brigham

Mass General Brigham is an integrated academic health care system, uniting great minds to solve the hardest problems in medicine for our communities and the world. Mass General Brigham connects a full continuum of care across a system of academic medical centers, community and specialty hospitals, a health insurance plan, physician networks, community health centers, home care, and long-term care services. Mass General Brigham is a nonprofit organization committed to patient care, research, teaching, and service to the community. In addition, Mass General Brigham is one of the nation’s leading biomedical research organizations with several Harvard Medical School teaching hospitals. For more information, please visit massgeneralbrigham.org.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UVA Health developing way to ID people at risk of dangerous lung scarring even before symptoms appear

2025-10-10
UVA Health lung researchers are developing a promising approach to detecting patients at risk of interstitial lung disease (ILD), an increasingly common condition that is a leading reason for lung transplants. The approach could accelerate the development of new and better treatments with more tolerable side effects than existing options. The UVA scientists have already discovered biological indicators in the blood – “biomarkers” – that can predict the survival chances of patients with ILD. But the researchers, led by John S. Kim, MD, believe these types of biomarkers can be used for far more: The scientists are aiming to determine if biomarkers ...

How can we know when curing cancer causes myocarditis?

2025-10-10
Treatments for cancer are continuously improving, but they can still cause debilitating, even fatal, side effects. Immune checkpoint inhibitors, or ICIs, have revolutionized cancer therapy, yet their use can trigger a rare but deadly side effect that affects the heart: myocarditis. ICI-related myocarditis has a mortality of up to 40%. The adverse side effects caused by ICIs are immune-related. The immune system becomes hyperactive and attacks tissue that is healthy, not cancerous. In ICI-related myocarditis, ...

Male infertility in Indian men linked to lifestyle choices and hormonal imbalances

2025-10-10
“Lifestyle habits and hormonal imbalances significantly affect the fertility of men.” BUFFALO, NY — October 10, 2025 — A new research paper was published in Volume 12 of Oncoscience on September 30, 2025, titled “Lifestyle and hormonal factors affecting semen quality and sperm DNA integrity: A cross-sectional study.” In this study, Saniya Imtiyaz Chamanmalik, Rajendra B. Nerli, and Pankaja Umarane from KLE Academy of Higher Education and Research and Dr. D. Y. Patil ...

An acoustofluidic device for sample preparation and detection of small extracellular vesicles

2025-10-10
Recent research has achieved significant advances in acoustofluidic technologies for efficient isolation and biomarker-specific detection of small extracellular vesicles (sEVs). Nevertheless, rapid and high-sensitivity analysis of low-volume clinical samples remains challenging, often requiring multi-step preprocessing and bulky instrumentation. By integrating sharp-edge microstructures with acoustically induced vortices, we enable size-selective concentration of target-bound complexes for immediate fluorescence readout. "The acoustofluidic chip leverages localized acoustic streaming to spatially separate microbead-sEV conjugates from ...

The advent of nanotechnology has ushered in a transformative era for oncology, offering unprecedented capabilities for targeted drug delivery and controlled release. This paradigm shift enhances thera

2025-10-10
Cancer remains a leading cause of global morbidity and mortality. Traditional therapies like chemotherapy and radiotherapy are often limited by their lack of specificity, leading to systemic toxicity and the emergence of drug resistance. Nanoparticles, with dimensions ranging from 1 to 100 nm, offer a sophisticated solution. Their unique physicochemical properties allow them to navigate biological barriers and can be engineered for active targeting (e.g., using ligands for overexpressed cancer cell receptors) or passive targeting (exploiting the Enhanced Permeability and Retention effect of tumor vasculature). The cellular uptake ...

A prototype LED as thin as wallpaper — that glows like the sun

2025-10-10
Light bulbs come in many shapes and styles: globes, twists, flame-like candle tips and long tubes. But there aren’t many thin options. Now, researchers report in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces that they have created a paper-thin LED that gives off a warm, sun-like glow. The LEDs could light up the next generation of phone and computer screens and other light sources while helping users avoid disruptions to their sleep patterns. “This work demonstrates the feasibility of ultra-thin, large-area quantum dot LEDs that closely match the solar spectrum,” says Xianghua Wang, a corresponding author of the study. “These devices could enable next-generation eye-friendly ...

Transnational electoral participation of undocumented Mexican immigrants in the US

2025-10-10
The global increase in migration—with approximately 3.6% of the global population living as expatriates—has resulted in many countries extending external voting rights to their overseas citizens. This has prompted scholarly interest in understanding the electoral participation of immigrants in their countries of origin. However, most research has focused on the factors that drive the provision of external voting rights to expatriates rather than the extent to which these rights are exercised. Furthermore, prior research has largely overlooked the political behavior of undocumented immigrants, who constitute a significant share of the immigrant population, especially in the United ...

A new method to build more energy-efficient memory devices for a sustainable data future

2025-10-10
Fukuoka, Japan—Publishing in npj Spintronics, a research team led by Kyushu University have developed a new fabrication method for energy-efficient magnetic random-access memory (MRAM) using a new material called thulium iron garnet (TmIG) that has been attracting global attention for its ability to enable high-speed, low-power information rewriting at room temperature. The team hopes their findings will lead to significant improvements in the speed and power efficiency of high-computing hardware, such as those used to power generative AI. The rapid spread of generative ...

Freely levitating rotor spins out ultraprecise sensors for classical and quantum physics

2025-10-10
Levitation has long been pursued by stage magicians and physicists alike. For audiences, the sight of objects floating midair is wondrous. For scientists, it’s a powerful way of isolating objects from external disturbances. This is particularly useful in case of rotors, as their torque and angular momentum, used to measure gravity, gas pressure, momentum, among other phenomena in both classical and quantum physics, can be strongly influenced by friction. Freely suspending the rotor could drastically reduce these disturbances – and now, researchers from the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology (OIST) have designed, created, and analyzed such a macroscopic device, bringing ...

‘Chinese lantern’ structure shifts into more than a dozen shapes for various applications

2025-10-10
Researchers have created a polymer “Chinese lantern” that can snap into more than a dozen curved, three-dimensional shapes by compressing or twisting the original structure. This rapid shape-shifting behavior can be controlled remotely using a magnetic field, allowing the structure to be used for a variety of applications. The basic lantern object is made by cutting a polymer sheet into a diamond-like parallelogram shape, then cutting a row of parallel lines across the center of each sheet. This creates a row of identical ribbons that is connected by a solid ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Microwaves for energy-efficient chemical reactions

MXene current collectors could reduce size, improve recyclability of Li-ion batteries

Living near toxic sites linked to aggressive breast cancer

New discovery could open door to male birth control

Wirth elected Fellow of American Physical Society

The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Ahead-of-Print Tip Sheet: October 10, 2025

Destined to melt

Attitudes, not income, drive energy savings at home

The playbook for perfect polaritons

‘Disease in a dish’ study of progressive MS finds critical role for unusual type of brain cell

Solar-powered method lights the way to a ‘de-fossilized’ chemical industry

Screen time linked to lower academic achievement among Ontario elementary students

One-year outcomes after traumatic brain injury and early extracranial surgery in the TRACK-TBI Study

Enduring outcomes of COVID-19 work absences on the US labor market

Affirmative action repeal and racial and ethnic diversity in us medical school admissions

Cancer progression illuminated by new multi-omics tool

Screen time and standardized academic achievement tests in elementary school

GLP-1RA order fills and out-of-pocket costs by race, ethnicity, and indication

Study finds HEPA purifiers alone may not be enough to reduce viral exposure in schools

UVA Health developing way to ID people at risk of dangerous lung scarring even before symptoms appear

How can we know when curing cancer causes myocarditis?

Male infertility in Indian men linked to lifestyle choices and hormonal imbalances

An acoustofluidic device for sample preparation and detection of small extracellular vesicles

The advent of nanotechnology has ushered in a transformative era for oncology, offering unprecedented capabilities for targeted drug delivery and controlled release. This paradigm shift enhances thera

A prototype LED as thin as wallpaper — that glows like the sun

Transnational electoral participation of undocumented Mexican immigrants in the US

A new method to build more energy-efficient memory devices for a sustainable data future

Freely levitating rotor spins out ultraprecise sensors for classical and quantum physics

‘Chinese lantern’ structure shifts into more than a dozen shapes for various applications

Towards light-controlled electronic components

[Press-News.org] Study finds HEPA purifiers alone may not be enough to reduce viral exposure in schools
In a secondary analysis of a study of 200 classrooms, Mass General Brigham researchers found respiratory viral exposures were still high in those with HEPA purifiers, suggesting additional interventions are needed