| Literature DB >> 33335879 |
Luciana Guerra Gallo1, Ana Flávia de Morais Oliveira1,2, Amanda Amaral Abrahão1, Leticia Assad Maia Sandoval1, Yure Rodrigues Araújo Martins1, Maria Almirón3, Fabiana Sherine Ganem Dos Santos3, Wildo Navegantes Araújo1,4, Maria Regina Fernandes de Oliveira1,4, Henry Maia Peixoto1,4.
Abstract
Objective: To describe the methods used in a rapid review of the literature and to present the main epidemiological parameters that describe the transmission of SARS-Cov-2 and the illness caused by this virus, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).Entities:
Keywords: coronavirus infections; methods; models; parameters; review; statistical
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33335879 PMCID: PMC7735986 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.598547
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Description of identified epidemiological parameters of COVID-19.
| Basic reproduction number (R0) | The mean number of new infections arising from one infected person in a totally susceptible population ( |
| Serial interval | Time between onset of symptoms in a primary case (infector) and onset of symptoms in a secondary case (infectee) ( |
| Incubation period | Time between infection and onset of disease ( |
| Transmissibility period | Time during which a person infected with SARS- |
| Proportion of detected cases | Proportion of cases identified as infected with SARS- |
| Proportion of critical cases among hospitalized patients | Proportion of critical cases of COVID-19 among all hospitalized patients. |
| Proportion of deaths among critical cases | Proportion of deaths from COVID-19 among all critical cases of the disease. |
| Mean or median length of hospital stay | Time in days (mean or median) of hospital stay among COVID-19 cases. |
| Mean or median time between admission to hospital and onset of ARDS | Time in days (mean or median) of hospital stay among COVID-19 cases before onset of ARDS |
| Length of hospital stay in wards before admission at ICU | Time in days (mean or median) of hospital stay in wards among COVID-19 cases who required ICU |
Acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Intensive care unit.
Methodological proposal for quick literature review: identification of epidemiological parameters.
| Search scope | It should be structured as follows: definition of the population to be studied; choice of epidemiological parameters; organizing groups of parameters according to similarity (e.g., types of studies that generate them). |
| Eligibility criteria | For a quick and reliable selection, only include studies published as from the date of the first outbreak of the disease in the world; presenting at least one of the parameters assessed in the abstract; original investigations, literature reviews; published in English or in other languages of the group domain; including studies published in other languages, but with the abstract in the languages of the domain that allow clear identification of any parameters of interest. It is suggested for reviewers to exclude: studies from preprint databases that analyzed primary data and have not been submitted to ethical evaluation; opinion articles; epidemiological bulletins with overlapping data of the same place, and studies that do not allow a reliable translation. |
| Sources of information | Literature search should be divided into two phases: the first should search at least two international databases, and the second should track the lists of references of studies identified in the first stage. |
| Search in the databases | The search syntax must represent the problem to be investigated, its primary endpoints and the date that best represents the beginning of the first outbreak in the world. For example: (name of the disease OR name of virus) AND (endpoint 1 OR endpoint 2) AND (start date AND final date). |
| Study selection | Study selection should comprise the following stages: selection of studies for complete assessing, from evaluation of titles and abstracts as per eligibility criteria; reading of full texts and new evaluation considering eligibility. Non-matching stages, but with the support of a more experienced researcher to clarify doubts and organize the process. |
| Data extraction | Data extraction should be guided by means of a structured tool, which allows the objective identification of parameters and a quick assessment of the quality of studies, in terms of validation and accuracy of data. Non-matching stage but overseen by a researcher with a trained in epidemiology. |
Search syntax: MEDLINE.
Figure 1Flowchart of the selection process of evidence of clinical and epidemiological parameters of COVID-19. a, First group of parameters (syntax group 1); b, Second group of parameters (syntax group 2); c, articles published as pre-prints; d, article in non-English, Spanish, or Portuguese and the parameter data was not included in the abstract; e, it was not possible to extract the parameters of interest; f, did not provide data on COVID-19; g, Laboratory studies or other techniques.
Presentation of parameters: basic reproduction number (R0).
| Chen et al., 2020 ( | China | Between December 2019 and January 2020 | Reservoir-people transmission network model | 3,58. | – |
| Chen et al., 2020 ( | Japan (Diamond Princess cruise ship) | February 2020 | Package “earlyR” | 2.28 (95%CI: 2.06–2.52) | – |
| Kuniya, 2020 ( | Japan | Between January and February 2020 | SEIR Model | 2.6 (95%CI: 2.4–2.8) | – |
| Fang et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | SEIR Model | – | R according to date: Day 0: 2.4; day 10: 3.2; day 20: 2.98, etc. |
| Zhao et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | Statistical exponential growth model | 2.24 (95%CI: 1.96—2.55) | – |
| Kucharski et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | Stochastic transmission model | – | Rt |
| Wang et al., 2020 ( | China | Between December 2019 and February 2020 | SEIR Model | 3.1 | Rt |
| Rocklöv et al., 2020 ( | Japan (Diamond Princess cruise ship) | January 2020 | SEIR Model | 14.8 | Rt |
| Mizumoto and Chowell, 2020 ( | Japan (Diamond Princess cruise ship) | Between January and February 2020 | Next generation matrix (NGM) | Maximum Rt | |
| Tang et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | SEIR Model | 6.47 (95%CI: 5.71—7.23) | – |
| Wu et al., 2020 ( | China | Between December 2019 and January 2020 | SEIR Model | 2.68 (95%CI: 2.47–2.86) | – |
| Li et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | Statistical exponential growth model | 2.2 (95%CI: 1.4–3.9). | – |
| Zhao et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | Exponential growth model by Poisson in a completely susceptible population | 2.56 (95%CI: 2.49–2.63) | – |
| Wang et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | Statistical exponential growth model | 3.49 (95%CI: 3.42–3.58) | After containment measures Rt |
| Zhou et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | SEIR Model | 2.8–3.3 | – |
| Ki and Task Force for 2019-nCoV, 2020 ( | South Korea | Between January and February 2020 | Not informed | 0.48 (95%CI: 0.25–0.84) | – |
| Du et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | Exponential growth model based on public data from Wuhan | 1.32 (95%CI: 1.16–1.48) | – |
| Anastassopoulou et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | SIDR model | 2–2.6 | Other R0 |
| Song et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | Weibull distribution methods, | Weibull distribution methods: 3.74 (95%CI: 3.63–3.87); | – |
| Pan et al., 2020 ( | China | Between December 2019 and March 2020 | Used a method proposed by Cori et al. (2013) | – | Maximum Rt |
R0, basic reproduction number.
Rt, effective basic reproduction number (variable in time).
Reservoir–People transmission network.
SEIR: Susceptible – Exposed – Infected – Recovered.
Statistical exponential growth model.
NGM: next–generation matrix.
SIDR: Susceptible – Infected – Recovered – Death.
Cori A et al. (2013). doi: .
Article in Chinese, only the abstract in English was assessed.
Presentation of serial interval parameters, incubation period, and transmissibility period.
| Linton et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | Mean: 5.6. | – | – | |
| Song et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | No information | Mean: 5.01. | – | – |
| Pung et al., 2020 ( | Singapore | February 2020 | Median: 4 days | – | Range: 3–8 days | |
| Chan et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | Range: 3–6 days | – | – | |
| Lauer et al., 2020 ( | 50 places in and outside China | January and February 2020 | Median: 5.1 days | – | – | |
| Fan et al., 2020 ( | China | January and February 2020 | Mean: 6.7 days | – | – | |
| Yang et al., 2020 ( | China | January and February 2020 | Median: 7 days; | – | – | |
| Backer et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | Mean: 6.4 days | – | – | |
| Hu et al., 2020 ( | China | January and February 2020 | – | Median: 9.5 days | ||
| Li et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | Mean: 5.2 days | – | Mean ( | |
| Wu et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | Median: 6 days | – | – | |
| Zhang et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | Median: 4 days | – | – | |
| Ki and Task Force for 2019-nCoV, 2020 ( | South Korea | January and February 2020 | Mean: 3.9 days | – | Mean: 6.6 days; | |
| Nishiura et al., 2020 ( | China | February 2020 | Data from articles and reports: 28 pairs. | – | – | Median: 4.6 days |
| Lian et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January 17 and February 12, 2020 | Median: 5 days | – | – | |
| Sun et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | Median: 4.5 days | – | – | |
| Jia et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | Mean: 6.28 days | – | – | |
| Du et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | – | Mean: 3.96 (95%CI: 3.53–4.39 days) | |
| Guan et al., 2020 ( | China | Between December 2019 and January 2020 | Mean: 3.6 days | – | – | |
| Jin et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | With GI symptoms: median: 4 days | – | – | |
| Sun et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | Range: 5–10 days | – | – | |
| Guan et al., 2020 ( | China | Up to January 2020 | Median: 4 days | – | – |
N: total number of participants in the study.
GI: gastrointestinal symptoms.
95%CI: 95% confidence interval.
IQR: Interquartile range.
SD: Standard deviation.
Article in Chinese, only the abstract in English was assessed.
Presentation of parameters: detected cases, critical cases among hospitalized patients, deaths among the critical cases, hospitalization period, and hospitalization period before ARDS or ICU.
| R. Li et al., 2020 ( | China | March 2020 | No information | ?/? (14%; 95%CI: 10–18%) | – | - | – | – |
| Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia Emergency Response Epidemiology Team, 2020 ( | China | February 2020 | 44,672 /72,314 (61.8%) | – | - | – | - | |
| Zheng et al., 2020 ( | China | February 2020 | – | 2 | – | – | – | |
| Peng et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | 16 | – | – | – | |
| Liu et al., 2020 ( | China | Between December 2019 and January 2020 | – | 119 | 16/137 (11.7%) | – | (137)—Median of 7 days, ranging from 1 to 20 days – ARDS | |
| Wang et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | 36 | 6/36 (16.66%) | (47)—Median (among those who were discharged): 10 days (IQR 7–14 days) | (138)—Median: 5 days (IQR 1-10 days) | |
| Cheng et al., 2020 ( | China | Up to February 2020 | – | 72 | – | – | – | |
| Guan et al., 2020 ( | China | Up to January 2020. | – | 67 | 15/173 (8.67%) | Median of 13 (IQR 11.5–17.0 days) | Median of 5 days (IQR 2–7 days) between onset of symptoms and onset of pneumonia | |
| Mo et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | 37 | – | (22)—Median of fatal cases: 10.5 (IQR: 8–16 days); 133-−10 recovered cases (IQR 7–15 days) | - | |
| Zhou et al., 2020 ( | China | Up to January 2020 | – | 53 | 42/53 (78%) | (191)—median: 11 days (IQR: 7–14 days) | (191)—median: 12 days (IQR: 8-−15 days) | |
| Wan et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | 40 | 1/40 (2.5%) | – | – | |
| Huang et al., 2020 ( | China | Between December 2019 and January 2020 | – | 13 | 5/13 | – | (12) Median between 8 and 14 days | |
| Wang et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | 2 | – | - | – | |
| Young et al., 2020 ( | Singapore | Between January and February 2020 | – | 2 | – | – | (18) Mean – 8 days | |
| Chen et al., 2020 ( | China | January 2020 | – | 17 | 11/17 (64.7%) | – | – | |
| Wu et al., 2020 ( | China | Between December 2019 and January 2020 | – | 53 | 44/84 (52.4%) | (201)—median of 13 days (IQR: 10–16 days) | (201)—Median: 2 days (IQR−1–4 days) | |
| He et al., 2020 ( | China | February 2020 | – | – | 26/54 (48.1%) | – | – | |
| Wu et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | – | – | (21)—mean of patients who were discharged after 8 days | - | |
| Sun et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | 3 | – | (5 severe/critical patients): mean of 18.2 days ( | – | |
| Liu et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | (2)—mean: 16 days | – | |||
| Cao et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | 61 | – | (199)—Median: 15 days (IQR: 12–17 days)—(with pneumonia) | - | |
| Pan et al., 2020 ( | China | Between December 2019 and March 2020 | – | 970 | – | – | – | |
| Liu et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | 3 | – | – | – | |
| Cao et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | 2 | – | – | – | |
| Simonnet et al., 2020 ( | France | April 2020 | – | 85 | 18/78 | Time to mechanical ventilation ( | ||
| Lian et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | Group < 60 years: 9 | – | – | – | |
| Liu et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | 4 | – | – | – | |
| Guan et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | 50 | 50/1590 (6.2%) | – | – | |
| Petrie, 2020 ( | Australia | Between January and February 2020 | – | 39 | – | – | – | |
| Cai et al., 2020 ( | China | Between December 2019 and January 31, 2020 | – | 30c, h/298(10.1%) | 3/58 | (298)—Median: 20.5 days (IQR: 15–26 days) | – | |
| Bhatraju et al., 2020 ( | USA | Between February and March 2020 | – | – | 12/24 | (24)—Median: 12 days (IQR: 8–12 days) at hospital; at ICU: 9 days (IQR: 4–14 days) | – | |
| – | – | Duration of mechanical ventilation: general 10 days (IQR: 7–12 days); among those who were extubated ( | – | |||||
| Jin et al., 2020 ( | China | Between January and February 2020 | – | With GI symptoms: 5 | 1/74 | – | – | |
| Republic of Korea, 2020 ( | Korea | January and March 2020 | 4,212/94,635 (4.45%) | – | – | – | – |
The proportion of registry of infections at the first moment was estimated at 0.65 (95%CI: 0.60–0.69), that is, 65% of infections were registered/detected, in period 1. This proportion dropped to 14% before travel restrictions and was kept as such throughout the period 2.
Cases who required mechanical ventilation.
Cases who required admission to intensive care unit (ICU).
Cases reported as critical, with no mentioning of case definition.
Cases who presented shock or who required mechanical ventilation or admission to intensive care unit (ICU).
Cases of severe respiratory failure, but with no need for monitoring at intensive care unit (ICU).
Cases who developed acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Critical cases were defined according to WHO guidelines.
Cases who presented shock.
Cases who had liver injury.
Cases with pneumonia severity index (PSI) 4 and 5.
ARDS, Acute respiratory distress syndrome; ICU, Intensive care unit; GI, gastrointestinal; 95%CI, 95% confidence interval; IQR, Interquartile range; SD, Standard deviation.
Article in Chinese, only the abstract in English was assessed.