| Literature DB >> 32027586 |
Jingyi Xiao, Eunice Y C Shiu, Huizhi Gao, Jessica Y Wong, Min W Fong, Sukhyun Ryu, Benjamin J Cowling.
Abstract
There were 3 influenza pandemics in the 20th century, and there has been 1 so far in the 21st century. Local, national, and international health authorities regularly update their plans for mitigating the next influenza pandemic in light of the latest available evidence on the effectiveness of various control measures in reducing transmission. Here, we review the evidence base on the effectiveness of nonpharmaceutical personal protective measures and environmental hygiene measures in nonhealthcare settings and discuss their potential inclusion in pandemic plans. Although mechanistic studies support the potential effect of hand hygiene or face masks, evidence from 14 randomized controlled trials of these measures did not support a substantial effect on transmission of laboratory-confirmed influenza. We similarly found limited evidence on the effectiveness of improved hygiene and environmental cleaning. We identified several major knowledge gaps requiring further research, most fundamentally an improved characterization of the modes of person-to-person transmission.Entities:
Keywords: environmental measures; influenza; influenza virus; meta-analysis; nonhealthcare settings; nonpharmaceutical measures; pandemic influenza; personal protective measures; public health; respiratory infections; viruses
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32027586 PMCID: PMC7181938 DOI: 10.3201/eid2605.190994
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Summary of literature searches for systematic review on personal and environmental nonpharmaceutical interventions for pandemic influenza*
| Types of interventions | No. studies identified | Study designs included† | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hand hygiene | 11 | RCT | The evidence from RCTs suggested that hand hygiene interventions do not have a substantial effect on influenza transmission. |
| Respiratory etiquette | 0 | NA | We did not identify research evaluating the effectiveness of respiratory etiquette on influenza transmission. |
| Face masks | 10 | RCT | The evidence from RCTs suggested that the use of face masks either by infected persons or by uninfected persons does not have a substantial effect on influenza transmission. |
| Surface and object cleaning | 3 | RCT, observational studies | There was a limited amount of evidence suggesting that surface and object cleaning does not have a substantial effect on influenza transmission. |
*NA, not available; RCT randomized controlled trial. †In these systematic reviews, we prioritized RCTs, and only considered observational studies if there were a small number of RCTs. Our rationale was that with evidence from a larger number of RCTs, additional evidence from observational studies would be unlikely to change overall conclusions.
Figure 1Meta-analysis of risk ratios for the effect of hand hygiene with or without face mask use on laboratory-confirmed influenza from 10 randomized controlled trials with >11,000 participants. A) Hand hygiene alone; B) hand hygiene and face mask; C) hand hygiene with or without face mask. Pooled estimates were not made if there was high heterogeneity (I2 >75%). Squares indicate risk ratio for each of the included studies, horizontal lines indicate 95% CIs, dashed vertical line indicates pooled estimation of risk ratio, and diamond indicates pooled estimation of risk ratio. Diamond width corresponds to the 95% CI.
Figure 2Meta-analysis of risk ratios for the effect of face mask use with or without enhanced hand hygiene on laboratory-confirmed influenza from 10 randomized controlled trials with >6,500 participants. A) Face mask use alone; B) face mask and hand hygiene; C) face mask with or without hand hygiene. Pooled estimates were not made if there was high heterogeneity (I2 >75%). Squares indicate risk ratio for each of the included studies, horizontal lines indicate 95% CIs, dashed vertical lines indicate pooled estimation of risk ratio, and diamonds indicate pooled estimation of risk ratio. Diamond width corresponds to the 95% CI.
Knowledge gaps for personal protective and environmental nonpharmaceutical interventions for pandemic influenza*
| Intervention | Knowledge gaps | Suggested studies |
|---|---|---|
| Hand hygiene | There are major gaps in our knowledge of the mechanisms of person-to-person transmission of influenza, including the role of direct and indirect contact, the degree of viral contamination on hands and various types of surfaces in different settings, and the potential for contact transmission to occur in different locations and under different environmental conditions. There is little information on whether greater reductions in transmission could be possible with combinations of personal intervention (e.g., isolation away from family members as much as possible, plus using face masks and enhancing hand hygiene). | Additional high-quality RCTs of efficacy of hand hygiene against laboratory-confirmed influenza in other nonhealthcare settings, except households and university residential halls, would be valuable. In particular, studies in school settings are needed to solve the discrepancy between the two studies from the United States and Egypt. |
| Respiratory etiquette | There is no evidence about the quantitative effectiveness of respiratory etiquette against influenza virus. | RCTs of interventions to demonstrate the effectiveness of respiratory etiquette in reducing influenza transmission would be valuable. |
| Face mask | There are major gaps in our knowledge of the mechanisms of person-to-person transmission of influenza, including the importance of transmission through droplets of different sizes including small particle aerosols, and the potential for droplet and aerosol transmission to occur in different locations and with environmental conditions. | Additional high-quality RCTs of efficacy of face masks against laboratory-confirmed influenza would be valuable. Effectiveness of face masks or respirator use to prevent influenza prevention in special subpopulation, such as immunocompromised persons, would be valuable. |
| Surface and object cleaning | The effectiveness of different cleaning products in preventing influenza transmission–in terms of cleaning frequency, cleaning dosage, cleaning time point, and cleaning targeted surface and object material–remains unknown. | RCTs of interventions to demonstrate the effectiveness of surface and object cleaning in reducing influenza transmission would be valuable. Studies that can demonstrate the reduction of environmental detection of influenza virus through cleaning of surfaces and objects would also be valuable. |
*RCT, randomized control trial.