| Literature DB >> 35862938 |
Alexandra Choi1, Louise C Mâsse2,3, Samantha Bardwell4, Iryna Kayda5, Yanjie Zhao1, Yang Xin Zi Xu1, Ani Markarian1, Daniel Coombs4, Adrienne Macdonald6, Allison W Watts7, Nalin Dhillon6, Michael Irvine8, Collette O'Reilly9, Pascal M Lavoie2,7,10, David M Goldfarb2,10,11.
Abstract
We prospectively studied SARS-CoV-2 transmission at schools in an era of variants of concern, offering all close contacts serial viral asymptomatic testing up to 14 days. From the 69 primary cases detected in schools, 392 close contacts were identified and offered asymptomatic testing. A total of 229 (58%) were close school contacts, and of these, 3 tested positive (1.3%), 2 of which were detected through asymptomatic testing. This is in contrast to the 117 household contacts, where 43 (37%) went on to become secondary cases. Routine asymptomatic testing of close contacts should be examined in the context of local testing rates, preventive measures, programmatic costs, and health impacts of asymptomatic transmission. IMPORTANCE There is concern that schools may be a setting where asymptomatic infections might result in significant "silent" transmission of SARS-CoV-2, particularly after the emergence of more transmissible variants of concern. After the programmatic implementation of a strategy of asymptomatic testing of close COVID-19 contacts as part of contact tracing in the school setting, the majority of the secondary cases were still found to have occurred in home or social contacts. However, for the 6.2% of secondary cases that occurred in close school contacts, the majority were detected through asymptomatic testing. The potential added yield of this approach needs to be considered within the overall setting, including consideration of the local epidemiology, ongoing goals of case and contact management, additional costs, logistical challenges for families, and possible health impacts of asymptomatic transmission.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; asymptomatic; school; transmission
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35862938 PMCID: PMC9430687 DOI: 10.1128/spectrum.00622-22
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiol Spectr ISSN: 2165-0497
Characteristics of 69 student and staff SARS-CoV-2 cases and all close contacts
| Variable | Primary cases in students and staff (N = 69) | Close contacts who became cases | Close contacts who did not become cases (N = 344) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age at time of report | |||
| ≤18 | 94% (65/69); median, 12; interquartile range (IQR), 9, 12; range, 6, 18 | 35% (17/48); median, 12; IQR, 7, 17; range, 4, 18 | 76% (262/344); median, 11; IQR, 9, 13; range, 1, 18 |
| 19–64 | 6% (4/69); median, 48; IQR, 41, 53; range, 35, 57 | 58% (28/48); median, 45; IQR, 38, 49; range, 21, 53 | 22% (77/344); median, 44; IQR, 37, 49; range, 19, 63 |
| ≥65 | 0 | 6% (3/48); median: 71; IQR, 71, 74; range, 71, 76 | 1% (5/344); median, 68; IQR, 67, 69; range, 67, 71 |
| English first language | NA | 61% (25/41); 7 unknowns | 81% (255/315); 29 unknowns |
| No. of bedrooms per home | NA | Median, 3; IQR, 3, 5; range, 1, 6; 9 unknowns | Median, 3; IQR, 3, 5; range, 1, 6; 273 unknowns |
| Linked to confirmed case or cluster | |||
| No | 50.72% (35/69) | 4.17% (2/48) | NA |
| Yes, non-household contact | 30.43% (21/69) | 12.50% (6/48) | NA |
| Yes, household contact | 18.84% (13/69) | 83.33% (40/48) | NA |
| Case status | |||
| Recovered/removed from isolation | 66/69; 3 unknowns | 48/48 | NA |
| Deceased | 0 | 0 | NA |
| Active/lost to follow-up | 0 | 0 | NA |
| Ever hospitalized | 0 | 4.17% (2/48) | NA |
| Ever admitted to ICU | 0 | 0 | NA |
| One or more comorbidities | 1.45% (1/69) | 14.58% (7/48) | NA |
NA, not applicable.
Includes all contacts regardless of the setting in which they were exposed.
FIG 1Flow diagram of close contacts who became cases and who did not by contact type. Other contacts comprise 48% social (N = 22), 7% extracurricular (N = 3), 35% mixed school and social (N = 16), and 10% unidentified (N = 5).
FIG 2Flow chart of asymptomatic testing participation and test results.