| Literature DB >> 35534836 |
Devon P Humphreys1, Kathleen M Gavin1,2, Kaylan M Olds1, Marc P Bonaca2,3, Timothy A Bauer4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diagnostic testing accessibility and asymptomatic transmission of SARS-CoV-2 present major challenges for curbing and preventing community prevalence of COVID-19. At-home sample collection for molecular testing provides a convenient and effective solution for disease containment and prevention.Entities:
Keywords: Adults; COVID-19; Diagnosis; Humans; Prevalence; Risk; SARS-CoV-2; Specimen handling
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35534836 PMCID: PMC9081964 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-022-07377-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.667
Summary of kits, subjects, and test results for the entire study population
| Count | |
|---|---|
| No. of kits | 639,332 |
| No. of individuals | 282,831 |
| No. of one-time testers | 199,673 |
| No. of repeat testersa | 83,158 |
| No. COVID-19 negative results | 613,985 |
| No. COVID-19 positive results | 22,152 |
| No. unique COVID-19 positive cases | 20,806 |
| No. of reinfections | 67 |
| No. inconclusive results | 3187 |
| No. kits received but not tested | 8 |
aThe distribution of the number of repeat tests among included subjects ranged from 2 tests per individual subject to a single subject who tested 81 times
Demographic characteristics of the study population (N = 282,831)a
| Group | Value |
|---|---|
| N (%) | |
| Sex | |
| Female | 149,044 (52.7%) |
| Male | 133,787 (47.3%) |
| Ageb | |
| 18–21 years | 53,014 (18.7%) |
| 22–45 years | 147,422 (52.1%) |
| 46–65 years | 68,464 (24.2%) |
| 66 + years | 13,931 (4.9%) |
| Race | |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | 2003 (0.7%) |
| Asian | 15,398 (5.4%) |
| Black or African American | 27,394 (9.7%) |
| Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander | 1127 (0.4%) |
| White | 195,770 (69.2%) |
| Two or more races | 9178 (3.2%) |
| Other | 13,604 (4.8%) |
| Race Unknown | 18,357 (6.5%) |
| Ethnicity | |
| Latino or Hispanic | 30,498 (10.8%) |
| Not Latino or Hispanic | 218,736 (77.3%) |
| Ethnicity Unknown | 33,597 (11.9%) |
| Healthcare provider | |
| Yes | 41,439 (14.7%) |
| No | 227,146 (80.3%) |
| Unknown | 14,246 (5.0%) |
| Risk of severe infectionc | |
| High Risk | 81,294 (28.7%) |
| Low Risk | 201,537 (71.3%) |
| Pregnancy statusd | |
| Pregnant | 2265 (1.5%) |
| Not pregnant | 146,297 (98.2%) |
| Unknown status | 482 (0.3%) |
aOf these 282,831 individuals, 199,673 only tested once, while 83,158 tested more than once. Sixty-seven (67) individuals (0.02%) were considered reinfected after testing positive twice with > 90 days between the two collection dates
bMedian age is 35 years; IQR = 27 (22–49)
cRisk was determined according to user-reported comorbidities and age
dN = 149,044, the number of females in the study population
Fig. 1Percent distribution of the study population by state
Prevalence of SARS-CoV-2
| Detected | Not detected | Total | Prevalence | Relative risk | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asymptomatic | 10,142 | 575,292 | 585,434 | 1.73% (1.70–1.77) | 0.08a |
| Symptomatic | 10,664 | 38,693 | 49,357 | 21.61% (21.7–22.7) | 12.47b |
| Total | 20,806 | 613,985 | 634,791c | 3.28% (3.23–3.32) | NA |
| Asymptomatic (%) | 48.75% | 93.70% | 92.22% | ||
| Symptomatic (%) | 51.25% | 6.30% | 7.78% | ||
aRelative risk of asymptomatic/symptomatic probabilities of infection
bRelative risk of symptomatic/asymptomatic probabilities of infection
cThe number of total samples evaluated for prevalence and risk analysis is lower than the total study population by removing invalid PCR results (N = 3187) and exclusion of sequential Positive Results within 90 days of each other (N = 1346), for a total of 4533 excluded from this analysis
Fig. 2Risk of SARS-CoV-2 positivity in those reporting no symptoms relative to those that reported symptoms. The overall log risk ratio of a positive case given no symptoms to infection with symptoms is − 2.52 (0.080 on a non-log scale). We present these data on a log scale to visualize the relationships among each subcategory more clearly. Error bars are 95% confidence intervals, computed using Wald’s normal approximation and log-transformation
Exposures reported by symptom status
| Area community spreada | Known | No known | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asymptomatic | 2379 (23.5%) | 4638 (45.7%) | 3125 (30.8%) | 10,142 (100%) |
| Symptomatic | 2688 (25.2%) | 6093 (57.1%) | 1883 (17.6%) | 10,664 (100%) |
| Total | 5067 (24.4%) | 10,731 (51.6%) | 5008 (24.1%) | 20,806 (100%) |
aIndividuals experiencing congregate housing and work situations
bIndividuals indicating they had a known exposure to a diagnosed or presumed infected individual
cIndividuals indicating they had no known exposure to COVID-19
Fig. 3Distributions of Ct values from RT-PCR testing for detection of SARS-CoV-2, stratified by self-reported symptoms. Summary statistics including each distribution’s minimum Ct value, median, maximum, mean, standard deviation (SD), and skewness are presented by status at the top of the figure. Results here are presented for the N1 gene only. Bin widths were set to 0.5 Ct units. N = 7571 positive tests for which Ct values were available from a single partner laboratory, including repeat tests for the same individual within a 90-day window and new infections outside of a 90-day window since the first positive result