| Literature DB >> 32369975 |
Robin N Thompson1,2, Francesca A Lovell-Read1, Uri Obolski3,4.
Abstract
Interventions targeting symptomatic hosts and their contacts were successful in bringing the 2003 SARS pandemic under control. In contrast, the COVID-19 pandemic has been harder to contain, partly because of its wide spectrum of symptoms in infectious hosts. Current evidence suggests that individuals can transmit the novel coronavirus while displaying few symptoms. Here, we show that the proportion of infections arising from hosts with few symptoms at the start of an outbreak can, in combination with the basic reproduction number, indicate whether or not interventions targeting symptomatic hosts are likely to be effective. However, as an outbreak continues, the proportion of infections arising from hosts with few symptoms changes in response to control measures. A high proportion of infections from hosts with few symptoms after the initial stages of an outbreak is only problematic if the rate of new infections remains high. Otherwise, it can simply indicate that symptomatic transmissions are being prevented successfully. This should be considered when interpreting estimates of the extent of transmission from hosts with few COVID-19 symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; infectious period; infectiousness; presymptomatic transmission; reproduction number; symptom onset to hospitalisation; symptoms
Year: 2020 PMID: 32369975 PMCID: PMC7288278 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9051297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Changes in the period between symptom onset and hospitalisation (the assumed symptomatic infectious period) from 2 January 2020 to 22 January 2020. (A) Schematic showing the assumed epidemiology of infected hosts. Infected individuals initially have no or few symptoms. Later in infection, infected individuals develop clear symptoms. (B) Estimated mean period between symptom onset and hospitalisation (blue), along with the corresponding 95% confidence interval for the mean value (grey shaded region). Circle areas are proportional to the numbers of individuals with symptom onset date t who were hospitalised days later.
Figure 2The reproduction number ( ) and the proportion of transmissions from hosts with few symptoms () vary in response to changes in the period between symptom onset and hospitalisation. (A) Variation in and between 2 January and 22 January 2020 due to changes in the mean time from symptom onset to hospitalisation ( days; see Figure 1B), under the assumption that . Values of and were calculated using Equations (1) and (2), respectively. Lines represent different values of the initial proportion of transmissions from hosts with few symptoms (). Values of between 0 and 0.4 were considered in steps of 0.05 (i.e., nine values in total). In the period from 2 January to 22 January 2020, transmissions from hosts with clear symptoms were typically prevented increasingly effectively, leading to a temporal trend from the tops to the bottoms of the lines shown. (B) Equivalent figure to panel A, but with . (C) Equivalent figure to panel A, but with . (D) Required time within which symptomatic infectious hosts must be isolated on average ( days) so that is less than one (i.e., the outbreak is controlled), calculated using Equation (1) for different pairs of values of and . In panels A-C, the horizontal black line shows the threshold value of for outbreak control (). The value of used in all panels is 6.7 days (as estimated in Figure 1B).