| Literature DB >> 33848893 |
Nazar Zaki1, Elfadil A Mohamed2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A novel coronavirus (COVID-19) has taken the world by storm. The disease has spread very swiftly worldwide. A timely clue which includes the estimation of the incubation period among COVID-19 patients can allow governments and healthcare authorities to act accordingly.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Coronavirus; Incubation period; Infectious disease; Pandemic
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33848893 PMCID: PMC7869687 DOI: 10.1016/j.jiph.2021.01.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Public Health ISSN: 1876-0341 Impact factor: 3.718
Fig. 1Flowchart of the study inclusions and exclusions of articles.
An overview of articles investigating and reporting on the incubation period of COVID-19.
| Ref. | Incubation Period | Method for estimating the incubation period. | Number of cases | Location | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Incubation Period Studies | |||||
| [ | 6.4 days (95% CI: 5.6–7.7), ranging from 2.1 to 11.1 days (2.5th to 97.5th percentile) | Probability density function (PDF). Used a doubly interval-censored likelihood function to estimate the parameter values. Used RStan package in R | 88 | Outside Wuhan, | The study provides empirical evidence and the estimation is within the range for the incubation period of 0–14 days assumed by the WHO and of 2–12 days assumed by the ECDC [ |
| [ | 5 days (2–14 days with 95% confidence) | Best-fit lognormal distribution | Real-time data | outside of the Wuhan, China | Recommend the length of quarantine to be at least 14 days. |
| [ | SARS-CoV2 4.9 (95% CI:4.4.−5.5) | Fitted Weibull, lognormal, and gamma distributions | SARS-CoV2 49 | China | long incubation time was reported to be associated with SARS‐CoV‐2 infection, leading to adjustments in screening and control policies. |
| [ | Median 5.1 days (95% CI, 4.5–5.8 days) | Estimated the incubation time using a previously described parametric accelerated failure time model. Doubly interval-censored data. Data reduction technique | 181 | Regions, and countries outside Wuhan, Hubei province, China | 101 out of every 10,000 cases (99th percentile, 482) develop symptoms after 14 days of active monitoring or quarantine. |
| Transmission Characteristics | |||||
| [ | 5.2 days (95% confidence interval (CI): 4.1−7.0), with the 95th percentile of the distribution at 12.5 days | Estimated by fitting a log-normal distribution to data on exposure histories and onset dates in a subset of cases with detailed information available. | 10 | Wuhan, China | The estimation was based on information from only 10 cases and is somewhat imprecise. |
| [ | Mean of 7.2 days | Gamma distribution and a log-normal distribution | – | Chinese provinces excluding Hubei | The authors stated that the recommended 14-day quarantine period may lead to a 6.7% failure for quarantine and they suggested a 22-day quarantine period. |
| [ | Mean incubation periods as | Used interval censoring R package icenReg [ | 93 Singapore | Singapore, Tianjin (China) | Both datasets had shorter incubation periods for earlier-occurring cases. |
| [ | Median incubation period was | Recorded Observation | 104 | Hunan, outside-Wuhan | The incubation period of 8 patients exceeded 14 days. |
| [ | 1−19 days | Observation | 5 | Anyang, China | The incubation period for patient 1 was 19 days, which is long but within the reported range of 0–24 days |
| [ | be 4.9 days (95% confidence interval [CI], 4.4–5.4) days, ranging from 0.8–11.1 days (2.5th to 97.5th percentile) | Used a Weibull distribution-based survival analysis model with the extension of the Kaplan-Meier estimator to fit the curve of the incubation period for COVID-19 cases. | 124 | Outside Wuhan city and Hubei province in China | 73.0% of the secondary cases, their date of getting infected was before symptom onset of the first-generation cases, particularly in the last 3 days of the incubation period. |
| [ | 5·2 days (1·8–12·4) and the mean serial interval at 5·1 days (1·3–11·6). | Lognormal distribution | 8579 cases from 30 provinces | outside Hubei in mainland China | The mean time from symptom onset to hospital admission decreased from 4·4 days (95% CI 0·0–14·0) from Dec 24 to Jan 27, to 2·6 days (0·0–9·0) for the period of Jan 28 to Feb 17. |
| Clinical Characteristics | |||||
| [ | Median incubation period of 2.5 | Lognormal distribution | 34 | Wuhan | The length of time from hospital admission to surgery (median time, 2.5 days is shorter than the median incubation time of 5.2 days |
| [ | Median incubation period of 4 | Median, Observation (2−7 days) | 291 | Mainland China | The median age was 47 years, and 41.90% were females. Only 1.18% of patients had direct contact with wildlife, whereas 31.30% had been to Wuhan and 71.80% had contacted people from Wuhan. |
| Case Study | |||||
| [ | Patient 3 – (3−6 days after exposure)Patients 1−4 symptomatic (6 | Observation | 5 | Wuhan | 5 patients (aged 36–66 years) |
| [ | Mean of 8.09 (4.99) days | Mean, Observation | 44 | Xiangyang, China | Most cases fell into the age group of 50−70 years old. |
| [ | 2–14 days, and mostly 3–7 days. | Observation | 3 | Hunan, China | A 47-year-old woman with long-term use of glucocorticoids did not develop any symptoms within the 14- day quarantine period. |
| [ | The Median incubation period is 4 days. | Observations | 36 | Tour group from China, in Singapore | Interpretation SARS-CoV-2 is transmissible in community settings, and local clusters of COVID-19 are expected in countries with high travel volume from China. |
| Epidemiological Characteristics | |||||
| [ | Estimated average, mode and median incubation periods are 7.4, 4 and 7 days, respectively | log-normal distribution | 483 | Henan, China | COVID-19 patients show gender (55% vs 45%) and age (81% aged between 21 and 60) preferences, possible causes were explored. |