| Literature DB >> 29093534 |
Hao Lei1, Yuguo Li2, Shenglan Xiao1, Xinyan Yang1, ChaoHsin Lin3, Sharon L Norris3, Daniel Wei3, Zhongmin Hu4, Shengcheng Ji4.
Abstract
Surfaces and objects surround us, and touching them is integral to everyday life. Pathogen contaminated surfaces (fomites) are known to transmit diseases. However, little is known about the ways and speed at which surfaces become contaminated. We found that under certain conditions, the number of contaminated surfaces grows logistically, corresponding to possible rapid transmission of infection. In such a surface network, pathogen can be transmitted great distances quickly-as far as people move. We found that the surface contamination network in aircraft cabins exhibits a community structure, with small communities connected by the aisle seatback surfaces and toilets, which are high-touch surfaces. In less than two to three hours, most high-touch surfaces in the cabin are contaminated, and within five to six hours nearly all touchable surfaces are contaminated. During short haul flight, aisle passengers have higher fomite exposure. This closely matches the spatial infection pattern of one reported inflight norovirus outbreaks. Our model is generally applicable to other crowded settings. The commonly repeated advice to "wash hands frequently" may be replaced in future by more strategic advice such as "clean surfaces right now", or advice based on who should wash their hands, and when.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29093534 PMCID: PMC5665872 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-13840-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Illustration of how surfaces are connected to the root surface by hand touching. A contaminated hand may initiate a new network when an individual moves to a new environment.
Figure 2Part of the surface contamination network in one simulation of the GII 737 outbreak.
Properties of the aisle seatback surface contamination network and surface contamination network in the aircraft cabins in the GII 737 and GI 747 outbreaks.
| Diameter [95% CI] | Average geodesic distance [95% CI] | Average clustering coefficient [95% CI] | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aircraft cabin in the GII 737 outbreak | Aisle seatback surface contamination network | 4.6 [4.23, 4.97] | 2.04 [1.96, 2.11] | 0.27 [0.25, 0.29] |
| Entire surface contamination network | 13.50 [13.00, 14.00] | 5.38 [5.28, 5.48] | 0.57 [0.56, 0.57] | |
| Aircraft cabin in the GI 747 outbreak | Aisle seatback surface contamination network | 4.90 [4.49, 5.31] | 2.0 [2.00, 2.00] | 0.52 [0.51, 0.52] |
| Entire surface contamination network | 7.90 [7.67, 8.12] | 3.88 [3.85, 3.90] | 0.66 [0.65, 0.66] | |
Figure 3Growth of the number of contaminated surfaces (a). GII 737 outbreak, aisle seatback surfaces, (b) GII 737 outbreak, all surfaces; (c) GI 747 outbreak, aisle seatback surfaces, (d) GI 747 outbreak, all surfaces; (e) predicted result for both surfaces and individuals using a theoretical model shown in Supplementary Section 1.2; and (f) measured results (Supplementary Section 1.3). In (a–d), each graph shows 100 simulations (grey) together with the average of these 100 simulations (black), and the fitting curve using the logistic function (red).
Figure 4(a) Average simulated infection risk of 100 simulations; (b) simulated infection risk in one chosen simulation and (c) reported spatial distribution of cases in the norovirus GII 737 outbreak.
Reported[27,28] and simulated infection risks overall, and for aisles seats only and non-aisle seats only.
| Outbreak | Infection risk (%) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chosen simulationb | Average of 100 simulations (95% CI) | Reported outbreak data (no. of infected/total susceptible) | |||
|
| Overall | 8.3 | 8.0 ([7.4, 8.6]) | 8.5 (6/71) | |
| Aisle seats | 20.0 | 16.0 ([14.8, 17.1]) | 20.8% (5/24) | Relative risk: 9.5 95% CI: 1.2 to 77.4 P-value: 0.008 | |
| Non-aisle seats | 2.8 | 4.3 ([3.9, 4.9]) | 2.1% (1/47) | ||
|
| Overall | 28.8 | 25.6 ([25.2, 26.1]) | 33.6 (41/122) | |
| Aisle seats | 36.6 | 35.8 ([35.1, 36.5]) | 37.2% (19/51) | Relative risk: 1.2 95% CI: 0.7 to 2.0 P-value: 0.47 | |
| Non-aisle seats | 24.0 | 19.2 ([18.7, 19.6]) | 31.0% (22/71) | ||
aOnly non-tour group members in Economy class were focused on here, as the tour group members might have had interaction with the index patient(s) before and after the flight.
bThis particular simulation was chosen because the predicted spatial distribution of the secondary cases (Fig. 4b) was close to the reported distribution of cases (Fig. 4c).
cOnly Zones C and D were studied because these two zones were adjacent to the vomiting incident, and most secondary cases (82%) were in these two zones.
Figure 5Diagram of the surface contact network and fomite route exposure model.
Figure 6The laboratory table set up for the surface contamination network studies.