| Literature DB >> 35082404 |
Thomas Edwards1, Grant A Kay1, Ghaith Aljayyoussi1, Sophie I Owen1, Andy R Harland2, Nicholas S Pierce3, James D F Calder4,5, Tom E Fletcher6, Emily R Adams7.
Abstract
The control of the COVID-19 pandemic in the UK has necessitated restrictions on amateur and professional sports due to the perceived infection risk to competitors, via direct person to person transmission, or possibly via the surfaces of sports equipment. The sharing of sports equipment such as tennis balls was therefore banned by some sport's governing bodies. We sought to investigate the potential of sporting equipment as transmission vectors of SARS-CoV-2. Ten different types of sporting equipment, including balls from common sports, were inoculated with 40 μl droplets containing clinically relevant concentrations of live SARS-CoV-2 virus. Materials were then swabbed at time points relevant to sports (1, 5, 15, 30, 90 min). The amount of live SARS-CoV-2 recovered at each time point was enumerated using viral plaque assays, and viral decay and half-life was estimated through fitting linear models to log transformed data from each material. At one minute, SARS-CoV-2 virus was recovered in only seven of the ten types of equipment with the low dose inoculum, one at five minutes and none at 15 min. Retrievable virus dropped significantly for all materials tested using the high dose inoculum with mean recovery of virus falling to 0.74% at 1 min, 0.39% at 15 min and 0.003% at 90 min. Viral recovery, predicted decay, and half-life varied between materials with porous surfaces limiting virus transmission. This study shows that there is an exponential reduction in SARS-CoV-2 recoverable from a range of sports equipment after a short time period, and virus is less transferrable from materials such as a tennis ball, red cricket ball and cricket glove. Given this rapid loss of viral load and the fact that transmission requires a significant inoculum to be transferred from equipment to the mucous membranes of another individual it seems unlikely that sports equipment is a major cause for transmission of SARS-CoV-2. These findings have important policy implications in the context of the pandemic and may promote other infection control measures in sports to reduce the risk of SARS-CoV-2 transmission and urge sports equipment manufacturers to identify surfaces that may or may not be likely to retain transferable virus.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35082404 PMCID: PMC8791971 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-05515-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Equipment and materials used in the study.
| Equipment type | Standard | Surface material |
|---|---|---|
| Cricket glove (palm) | BS 6183-4: 2001* | Calf leather |
| Control | Stainless steel | |
| Football | FIFA Quality Pro. Law 2: IFAB Laws of the Game | Thermoplastic Polyurethane (TPU) |
| Golf ball | Part 4, The Equipment Rules, USGA. Named on list of conforming balls, USGA, R&A | SurlynTM ionomer resin |
| Gym pit foam | n/a | Polyurethane (PU) foam (open cell) |
| Horse saddle | n/a | Polyurethane (PU) |
| Red Cricket ball (unused) | BS 5993:1994* Law 4, The Laws of Cricket, MCC | Bovine leather burnished with synthetic grease |
| Rugby ball | Law 2: Ball, World Rugby Laws | Rubberised polyester (PES) |
| Tennis Ball | ITF Approved, Rule 3, ITF Rules of Tennis | Raised Wool/Nylon woven cloth |
| White Cricket ball (unused) | BS 5993:1994* Law 4, The Laws of Cricket, MCC | Bovine leather with nitrocellulose coating |
*Indicates standards available to certify such products, however it is not known whether product was subject to standard testing.
Figure 1Recovered virus from all materials inoculated with 5.4 × 102 PFU (low inoculum, blue line) and 5.4 × 104 PFU (high inoculum, orange line) across the 90 min sampling time, including the control sample (steel disk). Large cirlcesrepresent the geometric mean of three replicates (shown as small circles) and Error bars indicate the geometric standard deviations.
Figure 2The predicted median decay of viral titres (solid black line) with 5–95 percentiles (shaded red areas) overlaid with observed PFU (grey circles) from all materials inoculated with 5.4 × 102 PFU (low inoculum) using a linear regression model on log-transformed data.
Figure 3Box and whiskers plots representing the Half-life and area under the curve (AUC) distribution of 500 generated profiles for each material inoculated with SARS-CoV-2 at 5.4 × 102 PFU (low inoculum).
Figure 4The predicted median decay of viral titres (solid black line) with 5–95 percentiles (shaded red areas) overlaid with observed PFU (grey circles) from all materials inoculated with 5.4 × 104 PFU (high inoculum) using a linear regression model on log-transformed data.
Figure 5Box and whiskers plots representing the Half-life and area under the curve (AUC) distribution of 500 generated profiles for each material inoculated with SARS-CoV-2 at 5.4 × 104 PFU (high inoculum).