| Literature DB >> 32418307 |
S Gupta1, J Parker1, S Smits1, J Underwood2, S Dolwani1.
Abstract
AIM: In addition to respiratory symptoms, COVID-19 can present with gastrointestinal complaints suggesting possible faeco-oral transmission. The primary aim of this review was to establish the incidence and timing of positive faecal samples for SARS-CoV-2 in patients with COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; faeces; gastrointestinal; viral shedding
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32418307 PMCID: PMC7276890 DOI: 10.1111/codi.15138
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Colorectal Dis ISSN: 1462-8910 Impact factor: 3.917
Data parameters for extraction.
| 1. | Study reference |
| 2. | Country of publication |
| 3. | Number and type of patients in the study |
| 4. | Type of sample taken (faecal sample, anal swab, RT‐PCR, culture) |
| 5. | Number of patients having faecal samples tested and number of positive samples |
| 6. | Timing of positive faecal swab after symptom onset |
| 7. | Duration of positive faecal specimen after negative nasopharyngeal swab |
| 8. | Any evidence for viable faecal virus or faeco‐oral transmission documented in the study |
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart.
Overview of patient demographics from studies included in the review [7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32].
| Reference | Country | Number of patients in study | Type of patients | Type of sample |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cai | China | 10 | Children, 3–131 months | Faeces |
| Chan | China | 6 | Family cluster (10–66 years) | Faeces |
| Chen | China | 1 | Man, 34 years | Faeces |
| Chen | China | 1 | Woman, 25 years | Faeces |
| Chen | China | 57 | Unclear | Anal swab |
| Han | China | 206 | Adults | Faeces |
| Holshue | USA | 1 | Man, 35 years | Faeces |
| Kim | Korea | 2 | Adult: man and woman | Faeces |
| Kujawski | USA | 12 | Adults | Faeces |
| Lescure | France | 5 | Adults | Faeces |
| Ling | China | 66 | Adults | Faeces |
| Lo | China | 10 | 9 adults, 1 child | Faeces |
| Nicastri | Italy | 1 | Adult, late 20s | Faeces |
| Pan | China | 17 | Laboratory samples | Faeces |
| Peng | China | 9 | Adults | Anal swab |
| Song | China | 1 | Middle aged woman | Anal swab |
| Tan | China | 1 | Man, 73 years | Rectal swab |
| Tang | China | 1 | Man, 10 years | Faeces |
| Wang | China | 205 | Adults and children, mean age 44 years | Faeces |
| Wu | China | 74 | Laboratory samples | Faeces |
| Xiao | China | 73 | Children and adults, 10 months to 78 years old | Faeces |
| Xing | China | 3 | Children, 1.5–6 years | Faeces |
| Xu | China | 10 | Children, 2 months to 15 years | Rectal swab |
| Zhang | China | 23 | Adults, median age 48 years | Faeces |
| Zhang | China | 14 | Adults, median age 41 years | Faeces |
| Zhang | China | 15 | Laboratory samples | Anal swab |
Overview of data extracted from studies included in the review with ≤ 10 patients tested for faecal virus [7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 19, 21, 22, 23, 24, 28, 29]
| Reference | Patients with positive faecal RT‐PCR | Timing of positive faecal RT‐PCR (from symptom onset unless stated otherwise) | Number of patients with positive faecal RT‐PCR and negative NP RT‐PCR | Duration of persistent positive faecal RT‐PCR after negative NP RT‐PCR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cai | 6 tested, 5 positives (83.3%) |
First test at 3–13 days Second test at 18–30 days Positive in all patients on both tests | 5 out of 5 (100%) | Ranged from 11 to 18 days |
| Chan | 4 tested, 0 positive | NA | NA | NA |
| Chen | 1 tested, 0 positive | NA | NA | NA |
| Chen | 1 tested, 1 positive (100%) | Day 11 | 1 out of 1 (100%) | 1 day |
| Holshue | 1 tested, 1 positive (100%) | Day 7 | Not available | Not available |
| Kim et al. [ | 2 tested, 2 positives (100%) | Ranged from day 8 to 17 | 0 out of 2 | NA |
| Kujawski | 10 tested, 7 positives (70%) | Ranged from day 6 to 18 | 2 out of 7 (28.6%) | Ranged from 4 to 6 days |
| Lescure | 5 tested, 2 positives (40%) | Ranged from day 2 to 13 | 1 out of 2 (50%) | 3 days |
| Lo | 10 tested, 10 positives (100%) | Ranged from day 2 to 19 | 4 out of 10 (40%) | Ranged from 2 to 10 days |
| Nicastri | 1 tested, 1 positive (100%) | Day 3 after admission | 0 out of 1 | NA |
| Peng | 9 tested, 2 positives (22.2%) |
Patient 1: day 3 Patient 2: unknown | Not available | Not available |
| Song | 1 tested, 0 positive | NA | NA | NA |
| Tan | 1 tested, 1 positive (100%) | Up to day 23 | 1 out of 1 (100%) | 7 days |
| Tang | 1 tested, 1 positive (100%) | Ranged from day 17 to 25 after exposure | 1 out of 1 (100%) | 10 days |
| Xing | 3 tested, 3 positives (100%) |
Patient 1 and 2: day 4 Patient 3: day 9 (after discharge) | 3 out of 3 (100%) | 8 and 20 days |
| Xu | 10 tested, 8 positives (80%) | Ranged from day 1 to 3 | 8 out of 8 (100%) | Ranged from 3 to 21 days |
NA, not applicable; NP, nasopharyngeal; RT‐PCR, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction.
Overview of data extracted from studies included in the review with > 10 patients tested for faecal virus [11, 12, 17, 20, 25, 26, 27, 30, 31, 32].
| Reference | Patients with positive faecal RT‐PCR | Timing of positive faecal RT‐PCR (from symptom onset unless stated otherwise) | Number of patients with positive faecal RT‐PCR and negative NP RT‐PCR | Duration of persistent positive faecal RT‐PCR after negative NP RT‐PCR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chen | 28 tested, 11 positives (39.3%) |
Only specify timings in two patients Patient 1: day 13 Patient 2: day 10 | 1 out of 2 (50%) | 3 days |
| Han | 22 tested, 12 positives (54.5%) | Not available | Not available | Not available |
| Ling | 66 tested, 66 positives (100%) | Not available | 43 out of 66 (65%) |
Duration to negative NP sample ranged from 6 to 11 days (median 9.5 days) Duration to negative faecal sample ranged from 9 to 16 days (median 11 days) NB: 11 patients still had positive faecal RT‐PCR at 31 days after admission to convalescence |
| Pan | 17 tested, 9 positives (53%) | Ranged from day 0 to 11 | Not available | Not available |
| Wang | 153 tested, 44 positives (29%) | Not available | Not available | Not available |
| Wu | 74 tested, 41 positives (55%) | Variable | 32 out of 41 (78%) |
Faecal sample remained positive for a mean duration of 27.9 days (9.2 days longer than positive respiratory sample) Patient 1: 33 days after negative nasopharyngeal swab Patient 2: 47 days from symptom onset |
| Xiao | 73 tested, 39 positives (53.4%) | Ranged from day 1 to 12 days | 17 out of 39 (23.3%) | Not available |
| Zhang | 12 tested, 10 positives (83.3%) | Day 4 | 6 out of 10 (60%) |
Median duration of positive NP sample 10 days median duration of positive faecal sample 22 days |
| Zhang | 14 tested, 5 positives (35.7%) | Ranged from day 4 to 10 | Not available | Not available |
| Zhang | 15 tested, 4 positives (26.7%) | Ranged from day 0 to 5 | Not available | Not available |
NA, not applicable; NP, nasopharyngeal; RT‐PCR, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction.