| Literature DB >> 33958016 |
Mona Marin1, Jessica Leung1, Adriana S Lopez1, Leah Shepersky1,2, D Scott Schmid1, Anne A Gershon3.
Abstract
Varicella poses an occupational risk and a nosocomial risk for susceptible healthcare personnel and patients, respectively. Patients with varicella are thought to be infectious from 1 to 2 days before rash onset until all lesions are crusted, typically 4-7 days after onset of rash. We searched Medline, Embase, Cochrane Library and CINAHL databases to assess evidence of varicella-zoster virus (VZV) transmission before varicella rash onset. Few articles (7) contributed epidemiologic evidence; no formal studies were found. Published articles reported infectiousness at variable intervals before rash onset, between <1 day to 4 days prior to rash, with 1-2 patients for each interval. Laboratory assessment of transmission before rash was also limited (10 articles). No culture-positive results were reported. VZV DNA was identified by PCR before rash onset in only one study however, PCR does not indicate infectivity of the virus. Based on available medical literature, VZV transmission before rash onset seems unlikely, although the possibility of pre-rash, respiratory transmission cannot be entirely ruled out.Entities:
Keywords: Before rash onset; VZV; transmission; varicella; varicella-zoster virus
Year: 2021 PMID: 33958016 PMCID: PMC8193770 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268821001102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Fig. 1.Study selection.
Epidemiologic evidence of varicella-zoster virus (VZV) transmission before rash onset in patients with varicella, by timing of transmission in relation to rash onset
| Study | Timing of VZV transmission in relation to rash onset | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Gordon and Meader [ | <1 day before rash onset | Patient, age 4, removed (for a surgery then isolated in another unit) 9 h before varicella lesions were noted in another patient in the initial ward; removed patient developed varicella 17 days later. |
| Moore and Hopkins [ | At least 1 day before rash onset | Outbreak investigation: excluding children with rash onset did not control the outbreak. Performed person-time analysis of in-class transmission from prodromal children in which exposure was defined as the day before a classmate stayed home with varicella. Cases of varicella were 3 times more likely to occur 12–17 days after exposure to a classmate considered during prodrome compared with children who did not have that exposure. Could not specifically identify the exact place of most exposures; transmission could have been from a playmate who was also a classmate or a sibling. Authors concluded that ‘the measure of association was too large to consider in-class exposure during the prodrome as unimportant.’ |
| Schamberg and Kolmer [ | At least 1 day before rash onset | Girl, age 16, developed a slight sore throat and a low fever, and was isolated in a room in a different floor of her home. A small whitish patch was noticed on the posterior pharyngeal wall. The next day the varicella rash appeared. Her brother, age 8, who was with the patient on the previous day, was kept in a distant part of the house. Sixteen days after exposure, the boy developed varicella. No information was given as to whether the brother left the home after exposure to his sister and potentially could have been exposed elsewhere. |
| Goodall and Washbourn [ | At least 2 days before rash onset | Girl, age 4, had ‘chickenpox eruption’; her brother had been removed to hospital for scarlet fever 2 days earlier and admitted in a ward in which there had never previously been a case of varicella. The brother developed varicella 19 days after his sister. |
| Brunell [ | At least 2 days before rash onset | Three siblings exposed to a parent with varicella were examined clinically and via nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal specimens; all developed varicella. One child attended school; his rash was noted at noon during a school holiday; rash was not present the previous evening or in the morning when specimens were collected, therefore the child did not have lesions when he attended school the day before. Postcard inquiry of classmates on other potential exposures was negative. Varicella occurred in a school contact 17 days after exposure. VZV was not detected in specimens from nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal specimens obtained daily from the 3 siblings from ~4 days before rash to 2 days after rash onset. |
| Evans [ | At least 4 days before rash onset | Observation occurred in the context of an outbreak in a hospital with 27 cases among patients and staff during 3.5 months. A nurse who worked in a varicella ward was assigned for 2 h to work in a different, varicella-free, ward. She developed varicella 4 days later. She was not in the hospital on the day of rash onset. A patient confined to bed in the varicella-free ward developed varicella 16 days after the nurse's rash onset. |
| Levy | ‘A few days’ before rash onset | Three co-primary cases in inmates (rash onset within 8 days). Patients reported that each heard that another inmate's child who visited on the day of presumed exposure developed varicella a few days after the visit. During the visit session, the 3 patients were seated next to each other at adjacent tables. Despite further inquiry of inmates, visitors and visit centre staff, the putative source was not identified. |
Laboratory evidence for VZV presence in the oropharynx before and after rash onset in patients with varicella
| Study | Method | Results of oropharyngeal specimen testing | Other results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before rash onset | After rash onset | |||
| Gold [ | Culture; specimens frozen and stored at −70°C before being tested. Study included exposed patients. | 3/3 patients VZV negative; specimens collected daily from 9, 6 and 6 days before rash onset | 5/5 patients VZV negative; specimens collected from day of rash onset to 3−5 days after | 5/5 patients VZV positive; vesicular fluid collected within 3 days of rash onset; 23/25 specimens positive |
| Nelson and Geme [ | Culture; most specimens stored at −50 °C for 1–2 weeks before inoculation. Source of patients not indicated. | 45 specimens from 29 children tested VZV negative; specimens collected from 8 days before to 4 days after rash onset (one specimen was collected 3 days before and four were collected 1 day before) | 1/1 patient VZV positive; vesicular fluid from herpes zoster lesions, repetitive isolation | |
| Trlifajova | Culture; specimens inoculated at most 1 h incubation at room temperature in collecting medium. Study included exposed patients. | 57/57 nasal and 56/56 oropharyngeal specimens collected during the entire incubation period VZV negative (11 patients); 11 nasal and 11 oropharyngeal specimens were collected in the last 3 days before rash onset | 3/23 pharyngeal and 2/22 nasal specimens VZV positive during the first 3 days after rash onset; none of the 13 samples collected on the first day of rash tested positive | 11/11 patients VZV positive; vesicular fluid collected during the first 3 days after rash onset (12/12 specimens) |
| Ozaki | Culture; specimens inoculated at most 4 h incubation at 4 °C in collecting medium. Study included paediatric outpatient patients with varicella, of whom 5 children during the incubation period, exposure source unknown. | 5/5 patients VZV negative; specimens collected 6, 4, 2 and 1 day(s) before rash onset | 5/117 patients with varicella VZV positive; specimens collected 1–2 days after rash onset | >90% VZV positivity rate; vesicular fluid collected during the first 3 days after rash onset |
| Brunell [ | Culture; swabs placed in partially frozen (4 °C) medium; up to 30 min between collection of specimens and inoculation. Study included children exposed to a parent with varicella. | 3/3 patients VZV negative; nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal specimens obtained daily from ~4 days before rash onset | 3/3 patients VZV negative; nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal specimens obtained daily on days 1 and 2 after rash onset | 2/3 patients VZV positive; vesicular fluid collected on days 2 and 3 of the rash |
| Koropchak | PCR; detection limit = 45 copies. Culture. Study included immunocompetent children and adults participants in a clinical trial evaluating oral acyclovir for treatment of varicella. | PCR: 1/30 patients VZV positive; specimens collected <24 h (mean 15.9 h) after appearance of skin lesions (most maculopapular); the VZV-positive patient had oral lesions typical of VZV | Skin lesion specimens collected <24 h after rash onset: PCR: 21/28 patients VZV positive | |
| Ozaki | PCR; detection limit = 50 copies. Study included exposed siblings. | 11/42 specimens collected from 15 days before rash onset VZV positive (18 children); 4/9 specimens collected within 5 days before rash onset VZV positive (3/7 children). A less sensitive assay (5 × 103 copies) did not detect viral DNA | 90% specimens VZV positive during the first 3 days after rash onset (39 specimens); 26% VZV positive with the less sensitive assay | |
| Hondo | PCR; estimated number of copies by comparing with the standard curves. Study included exposed siblings. | Two patients; throat swabs; DNA in low titres during the entire incubation period (<2 copies/swab); moreover, within 3 days before rash onset, VZV DNA detected only in 1/6 specimens | Titres abruptly increased to high levels when rash occurred; levels >100-fold higher than during the incubation period | |
| Asano | PCR; detection limit = 100 copies. Study included exposed siblings. | 0/2 patients VZV DNA positive in throat swabs collected daily from 8 days before rash onset or on the day of rash onset | 2/2 patients VZV DNA positive in throat swabs for 4 days starting the day after rash onset | |
| Asano | PCR; detection limit = 100 copies. Study included daycare contacts. | 1/13 children VZV DNA positive; throat swabs collected 4 h after recognised onset of varicella in a contact (only a few maculopapular lesions) | All children were vaccinated postexposure and none developed varicella (including the one with the VZV DNA positive throat swab). | |