| Literature DB >> 33857269 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Making testing available to everyone and tracing contacts might be the gold standard to control COVID-19. Many countries including the United Kingdom have relied on the symptom-based test and trace strategy in bringing the COVID-19 pandemic under control. The effectiveness of a test and trace strategy based on symptoms has been questionable and has failed to meet testing and tracing needs. This is further exacerbated by it not being delivered at the point of care, leading to rising cases and deaths. Increases in COVID-19 cases and deaths in the United Kingdom despite performing the highest number of tests in Europe suggest that symptom-based testing and contact tracing might not be effective as a control strategy. An alternative strategy is making testing available to all.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; contact tracing; infection surveillance; mass testing; prevention and control; review; test and trace; universal testing
Year: 2021 PMID: 33857269 PMCID: PMC8045129 DOI: 10.2196/27254
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIRx Med ISSN: 2563-6316
Figure 1The conventional test and trace system.
Figure 2Framework for decentralized mass testing and contact tracing. NHS: National Health Service.
Figure 3Flowchart showing article counts at each stage as well as the number of included articles.
Summary description of included studies.
| Study | Description | |
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| Emery et al [ | Asymptomatic transmissions among 3711 cruise ship passengers and crew, Japan |
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| Grassly et al [ | Percent reduction in reproduction number (hypothetical sample), United Kingdom |
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| Tsou et al [ | Outbreak containment using 393 COVID-19 cases, Taiwan |
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| Mizumoto et al [ | Asymptomatic cases among 3063 cruise ship passengers, Japan |
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| Sasmita et al [ | Infections using COVID-19 data, Indonesia |
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| Moghadas et al [ | A hypothetical population of 10,000 to measure required isolation and curtail silent transmission, Canada |
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| Bracis et al [ | SARS-CoV-2 transmissions projection using daily COVID-19 cases of King County from March 8-29, United States |
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| Pollmann et al [ | Impact of digital contact tracing (hypothetical sample) |
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| Hill et al [ | Reduction in infections using contact data from 2010, United Kingdom |
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| Gorji et al [ | Reduction in reproduction number (hypothetical sample), Switzerland |
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| Alsing et al [ | Intervention efficacy using commuter data from 2011, United Kingdom |
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| Hagan et al [ | SARS-CoV-2 prevalence among incarcerated persons in 6 jurisdictions, United States |
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| Paltiel et al [ | Evaluate clinical and economic performance using a hypothetical cohort of 4990, United States |
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| Porru et al [ | Health surveillance among 5942 staff of a hospital, Italy |
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| Nishiura et al [ | Asymptomatic ratio among 565 passengers, Japan |
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| Treibel et al [ | Asymptomatic carriers among 400 health care staff, United Kingdom |
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| Abeysuriya et al [ | SARS-CoV-2 prevalence among 180 pregnant women, United Kingdom |
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| Brown et al [ | SARS-CoV-2 prevalence among 1152 health care workers in 6 hospitals, United Kingdom |
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| Graham et al [ | Infections, clinical features, and outcome among 464 residents and staff in care homes, United Kingdom |
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| Arons et al [ | Transmission and adequacy of symptom-based screening among 89 residents of a skilled nursing home, United States |
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| Jameson et al [ | Asymptomatic infections among 121 nonsymptomatic health care staff, United States |
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| Callaghan et al [ | Prevention effectiveness and prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 among 46 patients and 171 health care staff, United States |
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| Louie et al [ | Transmission monitoring among 734 persons, United States |
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| Gudbjartsson et al [ | Transmissions among 9199 targeted, 10,797 openly invited, and 2283 randomly sampled persons, Iceland |
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| Reid et al [ | Testing and cases among 5204 health care staff, Canada |
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| Lavezzo et al [ | Population exposure among 2812 residents before and 2343 residents after the lockdown, Italy |
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| Kimball et al [ | The utility of symptom screening among 76 older adults in a skilled nursing home, United States |
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| Olalla et al [ | Asymptomatic cases among 498 health care staff, Spain |
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| Guery et al [ | Infections among 136 nursing care home staff, France |
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| Roxby et al [ | COVID-19 morbidity among 142 staff and residents in a residential community, United States |
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| Lytras et al [ | SARS-CoV-2 prevalence among passengers repatriated from the United Kingdom (n=357), Spain (n=394), and Turkey (n=32) to Greece |
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| Hoehl et al [ | Infections among 125 passengers evacuated to Germany |
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| Cao et al [ | Prevalence among 9,899,828 residents in China |
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| Baggett et al [ | Infections among 408 homeless shelter residents, United States |
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| Imbert et al [ | Infections among 150 homeless shelter residents, United States |
Risk of bias of modeling studies.
| Study | Relevance | Credibility | Overall risk | |
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| Emery et al [ | Insufficient | Insufficient | Low |
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| Grassly et al [ | Sufficient | Sufficient | Low |
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| Tsou et al [ | Insufficient | Insufficient | High |
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| Mizumoto et al [ | Insufficient | Insufficient | Moderate |
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| Sasmita et al [ | Insufficient | Insufficient | Moderate |
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| Moghadas et al [ | Sufficient | Insufficient | High |
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| Bracis et al [ | Insufficient | Sufficient | Low |
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| Pollmann et al [ | Insufficient | Insufficient | High |
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| Hill et al [ | Sufficient | Sufficient | Low |
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| Gorji et al [ | Insufficient | Insufficient | Moderate |
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| Alsing et al [ | Sufficient | Insufficient | Low |
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| Paltiel et al [ | Insufficient | Insufficient | Moderate |
Risk of bias of cross-sectional studies.
| Study | Overall risk | |
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| Hagan et al [ | High |
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| Nishiura et al [ | High |
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| Treibel et al [ | High |
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| Brown et al [ | Low |
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| Graham et al [ | Low |
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| Abeysuriya et al [ | Low |
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| Arons et al [ | High |
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| Jameson et al [ | High |
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| Callaghan et al [ | High |
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| Louie et al [ | Moderate |
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| Gudbjartsson et al [ | High |
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| Reid et al [ | High |
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| Lavezzo et al [ | Low |
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| Kimball et al [ | High |
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| Olalla et al [ | High |
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| Guery et al [ | High |
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| Roxby et al [ | High |
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| Lytras et al [ | High |
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| Hoehl et al [ | High |
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| Cao et al [ | Low |
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| Baggett et al [ | High |
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| Imbert et al [ | High |
Figure 4Evidence of effect attributable to the intervention (mass testing and contact tracing, MTT) and control (test and trace, TT) for the primary objective.
Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) evidence profile: certainty of evidence for the primary objective.
| Outcome | Studies, n | Quality of evidence factors | Direction of effect SOFa | Quality of evidenceb | |||||||
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| Limitation | Heterogeneity | Indirectness | Imprecision | Publication bias | TTc, n | MTTd, n | Directione |
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| Model | 11 | Serious | Serious | Serious | Serious | Unlikely | 3 | 8 | ↑ | Very low |
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| Cross-sectional study | 1 | Not serious | Unlikely | Serious | Serious | Unlikely | 0 | 1 | ↑ | Very low |
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| Model | 1 | Serious | Unlikely | Serious | Serious | Unlikely | 0 | 1 | ↑ | Very low |
aSOF: summary of findings.
bQuality of evidence graded as either “very low,” “low,” “moderate,” or “high.”
cTT: test and trace.
dMTT: mass testing and contact tracing.
e↑MTT is better than TT; ↓TT is better than MTT; ↔ MTT and TT are equivocal.
Figure 5Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 carriers among detected cases, in asymptomatic and mixed-sample populations.
Figure 6Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 carriers among stratified positive cases.
Figure 7Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 carriers in the stratified overall sampled population.
Figure 8Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 carriers among cases and in the sampled population in the United Kingdom.