| Literature DB >> 34138915 |
Gregory M Marcus1, Jeffrey E Olgin1, Noah D Peyser1, Eric Vittinghoff1, Vivian Yang1, Sean Joyce1, Robert Avram1, Geoffrey H Tison1, David Wen1, Xochitl Butcher1, Helena Eitel1, Mark J Pletcher1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the absence of universal testing, effective therapies, or vaccines, identifying risk factors for viral infection, particularly readily modifiable exposures and behaviors, is required to identify effective strategies against viral infection and transmission.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34138915 PMCID: PMC8211176 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0253120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Baseline characteristics of participants with and without prevalent viral symptoms.
| Prevalent Symptoms N = 374 | Included in Incident Analyses N = 14,335 | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| <0.001 | |||
| 18–29 | 63 (16.8%) | 1,961 (13.7%) | |
| 30–39 | 112 (29.9%) | 3,225 (22.5%) | |
| 40–49 | 86 (23.0%) | 2,873 (20.0%) | |
| 50–59 | 55 (14.7%) | 2,839 (19.8%) | |
| 60+ | 58 (15.5%) | 3,437 (24.0%) | |
| 253 (67.6%) | 9,322 (65.0%) | <0.001 | |
| 0.005 | |||
| White | 290 (77.5%) | 11,342 (79.1%) | |
| Black | 7 (1.9%) | 164 (1.1%) | |
| Hispanic (any race) | 43 (11.5%) | 1,307 (9.1%) | |
| Asian or Pacific Islander | 17 (4.5%) | 1,150 (8.0%) | |
| Other (including multiracial) | 17 (4.5%) | 372 (2.6%) | |
| <0.001 | |||
| Less than high school | 4 (1.1%) | 57 (0.4%) | |
| High school graduate | 14 (3.7%) | 471 (3.3%) | |
| Some college | 80 (21.4%) | 2,034 (14.2%) | |
| College graduate | 119 (31.8%) | 5,039 (35.2%) | |
| Post-graduate | 149 (39.8%) | 6,566 (45.8%) | |
| Other | 8 (2.1%) | 167 (1.2%) | |
| 7.0 (5.0–8.0) | 7.0 (6.0–8.0) | <0.001 | |
| 73 (19.5%) | 3,044 (21.2%) | 0.42 | |
| 78 (20.9%) | 1,440 (10.0%) | <0.001 | |
| 24 (6.4%) | 558 (3.9%) | 0.044 | |
| 26 (7.0%) | 701 (4.9%) | 0.18 | |
| 90 (24.1%) | 3,128 (21.8%) | 0.37 | |
| 2 (0.5%) | 77 (0.5%) | 0.44 | |
| 23 (6.1%) | 322 (2.2%) | <0.001 | |
| 20 (5.3%) | 1,098 (7.7%) | 0.096 | |
| 103 (27.5%) | 3,575 (24.9%) | 0.51 | |
| 240 (64.3%) | 10,627 (74.2%) | <0.001 | |
| 0.2 (0.0–0.9) | 0.4 (0.0–1.0) | 0.002 | |
| 5.0 (5.0–5.0) | 7.0 (7.0–8.0) | 0.076 | |
| 30 (8.1%) | 703 (4.9%) | 0.003 | |
| 24 (6.4%) | 342 (2.4%) | <0.001 | |
| 42 (11.4%) | 1,448 (10.2%) | 0.17 | |
| 223 (59.6%) | 8.512 (59.4%) | 0.040 | |
| 251 (67.1%) | 10,772 (75.1%) | 0.002 |
Fig 1Location of study participants.
Blue shading represents gradations of the number of participant-days within the US by county (left) and in the world by nation (right). Red shading depicts the number of symptomatic participants by location. Created with software provided by Tableau (www.tableau.com; San Francisco, CA) and published with their permission under the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0).
Fig 2Heat map of symptomatic and sample of asymptomatic patients displaying time of enrollment, survey completion, time of symptom development, and follow-up.
The left plot depicts participants that developed symptoms. The right plot depicts participants who did not develop symptoms matched in a one-to-one fashion with each symptomatic case by time of enrollment. Each row represents a unique study participant (n = 424 for each plot). The X-axis represents days of the current study. Blue = weekly survey completed (the first blue represents the enrollment visit). Green = daily survey completed (the daily survey contents are included in the weekly survey). Red = symptoms developed. Black = after development of symptoms. White = no data entry prior to or in the absence of symptoms.
Minimally adjusted odds of incident symptoms.
| Characteristic | Odds Ratio | 95% CI | p-value | Group p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Less than high school | reference | <0.001 | ||
| High school graduate | 0.44 | 0.16, 1.16 | 0.10 | <0.001 |
| Some college | 0.51 | 0.21, 1.24 | 0.14 | 0.015 |
| College grad | 0.29 | 0.12, 0.69 | 0.005 | |
| Post-grad | 0.26 | 0.11, 0.63 | 0.003 | |
| Other | 0.32 | 0.09, 1.08 | 0.07 | |
| 0.82 | 0.77, 0.86 | <0.001 | ||
| 1.01 | 0.81, 1.28 | 0.90 | ||
| 1.63 | 1.31, 2.03 | <0.001 | ||
| 1.02 | 0.61, 1.69 | 0.94 | ||
| 1.60 | 1.14, 2.26 | 0.007 | ||
| 1.61 | 1.28, 2.02 | <0.001 | ||
| 1.03 | 0.47, 2.25 | 0.94 | ||
| 1.58 | 1.26, 1.97 | <0.001 | ||
| 1.11 | 0.78, 1.57 | 0.57 | ||
| 1.20 | 0.98, 1.47 | 0.08 | ||
| 0.48 | 0.39, 0.58 | <0.001 | ||
| 0.90 | 0.76, 1.07 | 0.25 | ||
| 0.84 | 0.76, 0.93 | <0.001 | ||
| 2.43 | 1.79, 3.30 | <0.001 | ||
| 2.00 | 1.41, 2.84 | <0.001 | ||
| 1.32 | 1.01, 1.74 | 0.045 | ||
| 1.31 | 1.07, 1.62 | 0.01 | ||
| Much more | reference | 0.54 | ||
| Somewhat more | 1.17 | 0.94, 1.46 | 0.16 | 0.87 |
| A little more | 1.05 | 0.71, 1.57 | 0.80 | 0.52 |
| No change | 1.21 | 0.62, 2.37 | 0.57 | |
| Somewhat less | n/a | n/a, n/a | n/a | |
| Much less | n/a | n/a, n/a | n/a | |
| 0.90 | 0.72, 1.13 | 0.35 | ||
| 0.73 | 0.58, 0.92 | 0.007 | ||
| School closures | 0.76 | 0.57, 1.03 | 0.07 | |
| Restricted gatherings by venue | 0.84 | 0.57, 1.23 | 0.37 | |
| Restricted gatherings by number | 1.06 | 0.71, 1.56 | 0.79 | |
| Recommended working from home | 0.83 | 0.58, 1.18 | 0.29 | |
| Shelter in place | 0.89 | 0.66, 1.20 | 0.44 | |
| Other restrictions | 0.95 | 0.77, 1.16 | 0.59 | |
| 2.07 | 1.68, 2.56 | <0.001 | ||
| 1.21 | 1.12, 1.31 | <0.001 | ||
| 0 | reference | 0.29 | ||
| <= 1 km | 0.86 | 0.60, 1.24 | 0.43 | 0.22 |
| >1–10 km | 0.87 | 0.58, 1.29 | 0.49 | 0.15 |
| >10–50 km | 1.07 | 0.70, 1.63 | 0.75 | |
| >50 km | 0.52 | 0.25, 1.08 | 0.08 | |
| 0.36 | 0.09, 1.47 | 0.15 | ||
| <25% | reference | 0.64 | ||
| 25–50% | 1.07 | 0.77, 1.50 | 0.69 | 0.55 |
| 50–75% | 0.91 | 0.60, 1.39 | 0.66 | 0.51 |
| 75–100% | 1.18 | 0.88, 1.58 | 0.27 |
Models were adjusted for age, sex, race, ethnicity, and date.
* overall heterogeneity.
† heterogeneity of non-reference levels.
# linear trend.
Independent predictors of incident symptoms.
| Characteristic | Odds ratio | 95% CI | p-value | Group p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18–29 | reference | 0.22 | ||
| 30–39 | 0.83 | 0.60, 1.16 | 0.28 | 0.21 |
| 40–49 | 0.87 | 0.63, 1.22 | 0.42 | 0.15 |
| 50–59 | 0.96 | 0.69, 1.34 | 0.81 | |
| 60+ | 0.69 | 0.48, 1.00 | 0.049 | |
| White | reference | 0.41 | ||
| Black | 1.04 | 0.46, 2.37 | 0.92 | 0.26 |
| Hispanic (any race) | 1.10 | 0.80, 1.50 | 0.55 | 0.80 |
| Asian or Pacific Islander | 0.73 | 0.48, 1.10 | 0.14 | |
| Other (including multiracial) | 1.31 | 0.79, 2.16 | 0.30 | |
| 1.75 | 1.39, 2.20 | <0.001 | ||
| 0.87 | 0.83, 0.93 | <0.001 | ||
| 1.45 | 1.16, 1.81 | 0.001 | ||
| 1.35 | 1.08, 1.68 | 0.007 | ||
| 0.57 | 0.47, 0.70 | <0.001 | ||
| 1.86 | 1.35, 2.55 | <0.001 | ||
| 0.79 | 0.63, 0.99 | 0.037 | ||
| 2.06 | 1.67, 2.55 | <0.001 | ||
| 1.15 | 1.06, 1.25 | <0.001 | ||
| 0.93 | 0.90, 0.97 | <0.001 | ||
| 1.05 | 1.01, 1.09 | 0.019 |
Derived backwards stepwise elimination of covariates (see Methods).
* overall heterogeneity.
† heterogeneity of non-reference levels.
# linear trend.