| Literature DB >> 35497644 |
Lei Luo1, Zifeng Yang2, Jingyi Liang2, Yu Ma1, Hui Wang1, Chitin Hon3, Mei Jiang2, Zhengshi Lin2, Wenda Guan2, Zhitong Mai2, Yongming Li2, Kailin Mai2, Zhiqi Zeng2, Chuanmeizi Tu2, Jian Song2, Bin Liu2, Yong Liu2, Jianfeng He4, Huiyuan Li5, Bosheng Li4, Hang Dong1, Yutian Miao1, Shujun Fan1, Lirui Fan1, Xingyi Liang6, Ke Li1, Chun Chen1, Huihong Deng4, Zhicong Yang1, Nanshan Zhong2.
Abstract
The SARS-CoV-2 B.1.617.2 (Delta) variant flared up in late May in Guangzhou, China. Transmission characteristics of Delta variant were analysed for 153 confirmed cases and two complete transmission chains with seven generations were fully presented. A rapid transmission occurred in five generations within 10 days. The basic reproduction number (R0) was 3.60 (95% confidence interval: 2.50-5.30). After redefining the concept of close contact, the proportion of confirmed cases discovered from close contacts increased from 43% to 100%. With the usage of a yellow health code, the potential exposed individuals were self-motivated to take a nucleic acid test and regained public access with a negative testing result. Facing the massive requirement of screening, novel facilities like makeshift inflatable laboratories were promptly set up as a vital supplement and 17 cases were found, with 1 pre-symptomatic. The dynamic adjustment of these three interventions resulted in the decline of Rt from 5.00 to 1.00 within 9 days. By breaking the transmission chain and eliminating the transmission source through extending the scope of the close-contact tracing, health-code usage and mass testing, the Guangzhou Delta epidemic was effectively contained.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; close contact; control measure; mass testing; public health
Year: 2022 PMID: 35497644 PMCID: PMC9046578 DOI: 10.1093/nsr/nwac004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Natl Sci Rev ISSN: 2053-714X Impact factor: 23.178
Characteristics of Delta cases in Guangzhou, China from 21 May to 18 June 2021.
| Characteristics | No. (%) | Ct value, mean (SD) |
|---|---|---|
| Total | 153 | / |
| Incubation period (days)—median (IQR) | 4.00 (3.00, 6.00) | / |
| Serial time (days)—median (IQR) | 3.00 (2.00, 5.00) | / |
| Clustering | ||
| Household/community | 81 (52.94) | / |
| Restaurant | 41 (26.80) | / |
| School/workplace | 12 (7.84) | / |
| Other | 19 (12.41) | / |
| Generation | ||
| First | 1 (0.70) | 16.50 (/)[ |
| Second | 2 (1.40) | 14.03 (1.67) |
| Third | 15 (10.49) | 21.08 (5.49) |
| Fourth | 37 (25.87) | 21.46 (6.06) |
| Fifth | 43 (30.07) | 24.34 (7.27) |
| Sixth | 43 (30.07) | 22.94 (5.68) |
| Seventh | 2 (1.40) | 31.72 (8.63) |
| Total | 143[ | 22.62 (6.37) |
aThere was only one patient in this generation. bWe excluded 10 cases who were unable to trace their previous and next generations, and proportions of different generations were calculated by dividing the number by 143 instead of 153. IQR, interquartile range; SD, standard deviation; Ct, cycle threshold value.
Figure 1.Epidemiological linking network and two transmission chains confirmed by epidemiology investigation and whole-genome sequencing. (a) One hundred and forty-three cases are shown in the network. Cases in each generation are shown in circles with different colors. The first-generation patient (red circle, G1) is in the middle of the network. (b) Transmission Chain I. There are five cases in the sixth generation. G6.1 was a family member of G5, G6.2 was one of the classmates of G6.1. G6.3, G6.2 and G6.1 were the neighbors of G6.4. (c) Transmission Chain II. Highlighted in white represents the time before this epidemic onset; blue, red and green represent the second, third and fourth stages of the epidemic, respectively; the yellow boxes indicate the epidemiological relationships between generations. G, generation of transmission.
Figure 2.The case-finding source at each stage. Case-finding source includes fever clinic, close contact, key place and community. *Key place refers to where confirmed cases had stayed 4 days before the symptom onset.
The key events and public health interventions across the four stages in the campaign against SARS-CoV-2 Delta in Guangzhou.
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aPeople self-quarantined and performed nucleic acid tests on the 1st to 7th, 10th and 14th days of quarantine. bPeople could only enter but could not exit their own neighborhood and gatherings were strictly prohibited. Nucleic acid tests were performed on the 1st, 4th and 7th days. cPeople could only travel between home and working places with negative nucleic acid test results within 24 hours. dPrimary close contacts (PCC) referred to people (i) whoever was either in the same space, same workplace or building with infected people; (ii) those who had been with infected people 4 days before disease onset. Disease onset referred to date of symptom onset for symptomatic cases and sampling date of the first positive test result for pre-symptomatic case. eSecondary close contacts (SCC) referred to close contacts of PCC. fRisk areas included places with (i) >50 cumulative number of confirmed cases and at least one cluster was discovered within 14 days; (ii) cumulative number of confirmed non-clustered cases exceeded 50 within 14 days; (iii) newly reported confirmed cases within 14 days.
Figure 3.Exposure-risk classification and graded management. Public access included public transportation usage and public places entrance. Visiting NAT refers to door-to-door sampling process conducted by three-people groups. The exposed individuals were suggested to quarantine at home. NAT, nucleic acid test.
Figure 4.Effectiveness of epidemic control. (a) Interval between symptom onset and isolation among close contacts. (b) Interval between close-contacts identification and isolation. (c) Rt throughout the epidemic. Gray columns represent daily reported cases. The blue line represents the dynamic change of Rt and the surrounding purple area refers to 95% CI of Rt. The light-blue vertical lines separate the epidemic course into four stages.