| Literature DB >> 35983085 |
SeyedAhmad SeyedAlinaghi1, Amirali Karimi2, Hengameh Mojdeganlou3, Zahra Pashaei1, Pegah Mirzapour1, Ahmadreza Shamsabadi4, Alireza Barzegary5, Fatemeh Afroughi5,6, Soheil Dehghani2, Nazanin Janfaza7, Amirata Fakhfouri5, Sepideh Khodaei1, Esmaeil Mehraeen8, Omid Dadras9.
Abstract
Objective: Understanding the minimum infective dose is significant for risk assessment in the performance of suitable infection control strategies in healthcare centers. However, the literature lacks strong evidence regarding this value for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the minimum infectious dose of coronavirus disease 2019.Entities:
Keywords: Coronavirus disease 2019; minimum infective dose; severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
Year: 2022 PMID: 35983085 PMCID: PMC9379270 DOI: 10.1177/20503121221115053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Med ISSN: 2050-3121
Figure 1.PRISMA flow diagram of the study selection process.
Characteristics of the studies and participants.
| ID | First author (reference) | Type of study | Publication year | Country | Study population | Age | Gender (%) | Sign and symptoms | Laboratory data |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bao et al.
| Experimental (animal study) | 2020 | China | 34 transgenic mice | 6–11 months old | Male/female | Weight loss, interstitial pneumonia, and virus replication in the lungs | N/A |
| 2 | Bao et al.
| Experimental (animal study) | 2020 | China | 23 transgenic mice | 4–6 months old | Male/female | Weight loss | Based on serological analyses, 10 out of 23 mice were infected after direct contact and respiratory droplets exposure |
| 3 | Basu
| Cross-sectional | 2021 | USA | 2 SARS-CoV-2 positive | 49 (37 and 61 years old) | Female (100) | N/A | N/A |
| 4 | Bullard et al.
| Cross-sectional | 2021 | Canada | 90 SARS-CoV-2-positive samples | 45 | Male (49) | N/A | N/A |
| 5 | Bullard et al.
| Case series | 2021 | Canada | 305 COVID-19 patients | N/A | N/A | N/A | Culture growth in 31% of samples was seen; 19% in young children, 23% in older children, and 44% in adults |
| 6 | Chan et al.
| Case series | 2020 | China | 273 Specimens from 15 SARS-CoV-2-positive patients | N/A | N/A | N/A | 28.2% were COVID-19-RdRp/Hel and RdRp-P2 positive. All of them were positive for COVID-19-RdRp/Hel assay |
| 7 | Cross et al.
| Experimental (animal study) | 2020 | USA | 6 African green monkeys | N/A | N/A | Declined appetite, increased temperature, hypercapnia (3/6), gas distinction of small intestines. All monkeys had pulmonary consolidation with hyperemia and hemorrhage. Three of them had multifocal neutrophilicbroncho-interstitial pneumonia | Lymphocytopenia (5/6), thrombocytopenia (3/6 animals), granulocytosis (6/6), mild increase in ALT (2/6), a moderate increase in CRP (5/6), prolonged aPTT (6/6). SARS-CoV-2 vRNA was detected in the nasal swabs of all animals |
| 8 | Deng et al.
| Experimental (animal study) | 2020 | China | 5 Rhesus macaques | 3-5 years old | Male (100) | Opaque glass signs, obscure lung marking, severe progressive pulmonary infiltration, patchy lesions, increased density, and interstitial pneumonia appeared in the lungs | Viral load detected in nasal and throat swabs of CJ- and IT-inoculated animals from 1 to 6 days’ post-inoculation. Only in CJ-inoculated animals, viral load detected in conjunctival swabs and only in IT-inoculated animals is viral load detected in anal swabs |
| 9 | Dhakal et al.
| Experimental (animal study) | 2021 | USA | Golden Syrian hamsters | 8–10 week | Male/female | Bodyweight loss, lung injury | Females had two-fold greater IgM, IgG, and IgA responses and significantly greater IgG antibodies against the virus |
| 10 | Johnston et al.
| Experimental (animal study) | 2021 | USA | 3 naïve African green monkeys | N/A | N/A | Fever, lung opacity, mild hypoxia and erythema around the eyes, rectal bleeding | Lymphocyte and neutrophil fluctuations were noted for most animals on the study and were likely a result of the inflammatory response to infection |
| 11 | Kumar et al.
| Experimental (animal study) | 2021 | USA | Male Syrian golden hamsters | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 12 | Rathnasinghe et al.
| Experimental (animal study) | 2020 | USA | 2 hACE2 mice | 6 weeks old | Female (100) | In K18-hACE2 mice: 75% body weight loss, lethargy, ruffled fur, hunched posture, and labored breathing | Rathnasinghe et al.
|
| 13 | Rosenke et al.
| Experimental (animal study) | 2020 | USA | 24 Syrian hamsters | 4–6 weeks old and >27 weeks old | Male/female | Moderate broncho-interstitial pneumonia, along with high viral load in lungs and extensive virus shedding. Minor changes in respiratory pattern, lung lesions, loss of <10% body weight | In oral and rectal swabs high levels of viral gRNA were detected. On day 11 after infection, all oral swabs were positive and suggested that viral replication in upper respiratory areas was still ongoing |
| 14 | Ryan et al.
| Experimental (animal study) | 2021 | UK | 18 ferrets (three groups, every 6 ferrets) | N/A | Male/Female | In all ferrets of medium and high group: mild multifocal bronchopneumonia | In all ferrets of the medium and high group and one ferret of low group: Viral RNA shedding in the upper respiratory tract |
| 15 | Sia et al.
| Experimental (animal study) | 2020 | China | Golden hamsters | 4–5 weeks | Male (100) | Pneumocyte hyperplasia and weight loss | N/A |
| 16 | Song et al.
| Experimental (animal study) | 2021 | China | 18 hamsters | 12 weeks | Male/female | N/A | N/A |
| 17 | Van der Moeren et al.
| Cross-sectional | 2021 | Netherland | 248 (74 qRT-PCR positives, 174 qRT-PCR negatives) clinical combined oro-nasopharyngeal samples of individuals with COVID-19-like symptoms | N/A | N/A | Rhinitis, cough, elevated temperature, shortness of breath, or sudden loss of sense of taste or smell | DAA result: positive = 54 (Ct-value 12.2–27.7), negative = 20 (Ct-value 22.6–39.5) |
| 18 | Woolsey et al.
| Experimental (animal study) | 2020 | USA | 6 adult African green monkeys | N/A | N/A | Decreased appetite, fever, and hyperemia multifocal lesions of each lobe. The small intestine was somewhat loose and dilated with gas and yellow fluid. Mild lymphoid enlargement. Pulmonary edema and pulmonary hemorrhage. Pneumonia. | N/A |
| 19 | Yamayoshi et al.
| Case series | 2020 | Japan | SARS-CoV-2-positive samples | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
SARS-CoV-2: severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2; COVID-19: coronavirus disease 2019; qRT-PCR: quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction; ALT: alanine aminotransferase; CRP: C-reactive protein; aPTT: activated partial thromboplastin time; CJ: conjunctivally; IT: intratracheally.
Minimum infective dose of the subjects and related details of the studies.
| ID | First author (reference) | Host | Sampling site and method | Mode of transmission | Minimum infective dose | Symptomatic cases (%) | Clinical outcome (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bao et al.
| tgMice | RT-qPCR, heart, liver, spleen, lung, kidney, brain, intestine, and testis | IN | 70,000 PFU | 3 | All were alive at the end of the study |
| 2 | Bao et al.
| hACE2 mice | Throat and anal swab | Aerosol | 630 PFU | 39 | All were alive at the end of the study |
| 3 | Basu
| Human | Nasopharyngeal swab. | Droplet | 330 PFU | 100 | Both of them were alive |
| 4 | Bullard et al.
| Human | RT-PCR | Tissue culture | 197 PFU | 28.9 | N/A |
| 5 | Bullard et al.
| Human | RT-PCR | N/A | Children aged ⩽ 10 years = 221 PFU | 75.4 | All were alive at the end of the study. |
| 6 | Chan et al.
| Human | RT-qPCR | N/A | 1.26 PFU in vitro in the COVID-19-RdRp/Hel assay | N/A | N/A |
| 7 | Cross et al.
| African green monkey | Blood and mucosal swabs | IN | 2,800,000 PFU | 100 | All alive |
| 8 | Deng et al.
| Rhesus macaques | Nasal, throat, conjunctival, and anal swabs | CJ, IT, IG | 700,000 PFU | 100 | All alive. All of them are infected via CJ and IT routes but not the IG route. |
| 9 | Dhakal et al.
| Golden Syrian hamsters | Blood, nasal turbinate, trachea, and lung samples. Antibody and cytokine ELISA, computed tomography (CT), and qPCR | IN | 70,000 PFU | 100 | All were alive at the end of the study. Male experienced greater morbidity, greater body mass loss, more extensive pneumonia, and recovery slower than females |
| 10 | Johnston et al.
| Monkey | qRT-PCR | Airborne | 38,400 PFU | 100 | N/A |
| 11 | Kumar et al.
| Syrian golden hamsters | N/A | IN | 10,000,000 PFU | 100 | N/A |
| 12 | Rathnasinghe et al.
| Mice | qRT-PCR: | Injection | 10,000 PFU | 50 | In K18-hACE2 mice: dead |
| 13 | Rosenke et al.
| Hamsters | qRT-PCR: | IN | 700 PFU | 100 | All were alive at the end of the study |
| 14 | Ryan et al.
| Ferrets | RT-qPCR: | IN | Low: 500 PFU | 72 | All were alive at the end of the study |
| 15 | Sia et al.
| Hamster | RT-PCR: | Aerosols | 7 × 106.25 PFU | 50 | N/A |
| 16 | Song et al.
| Hamster | qRT-PCR: | IN | 700,000 PFU | SARS-CoV-2-infected but not mock-infected animals exhibited progressively body weight loss from 1 to 9 dpi. The infected animals exhibited severe weight loss at 5 days dpi (8.91%), which peaked at 9 dpi (18.02%), then gradually regained their weight by 14 dpi (5.04%) | Alveolar damage, involvement of the spleen, lymph nodes, different segments of the alimentary tract, kidney, adrenal gland, ovary, vesicular gland and prostate damage, gallbladder, myocardium, and lymph nodes. All the infected hamsters displayed severe systemic inflammatory responses |
| 17 | Van der Moeren et al.
| Human | qRT-PCR: | N/A | 364 PFU | 29.9 | N/A |
| 18 | Woolsey et al.
| Monkey | RT-qPCR mucosal swabs: | IN, IT | 500,000 PFU | N/A | N/A |
| 19 | Yamayoshi et al.
| Human calf | PCR (RT-qPCR): | N/A | 75–7500 PFU | N/A | Alveolar damage, involvement of the spleen, lymph nodes, different segments of the alimentary tract, kidney, adrenal gland, ovary, vesicular gland and prostate damage, gallbladder, myocardium, and lymph nodes. All the infected hamsters displayed severe systemic inflammatory responses |
TCID50: tissue culture infectious dose 50; PFU: plaque-forming unit; tgMice: transgenic mice; hACE2: human angiotensin converting enzyme 2; IN: intranasal; IG: intragastric; IO: intraocular; IT: intrathecal; IC: intracerebral; IP: intraperitoneal; CJ: conjunctivally; NR: not reported; DAA: Diasorin SARS-CoV-2 antigen detection assay; BAL: bronchoalveolar lavage.
Newcastle–Ottawa scale (NOS) quality assessment of the study.
| First author | Selection (out of 4) | Comparability (out of 2) | Exposure/outcome (out of 3) | Total (out of 9) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bao et al.
| *** | - | *** | 6 |
| Bao et al.
| *** | - | *** | 6 |
| Basu
| **** | * | *** | 8 |
| Bullard et al.
| **** | * | *** | 8 |
| Bullard et al.
| *** | * | *** | 7 |
| Chan et al.
| *** | * | *** | 7 |
| Cross et al.
| *** | - | ** | 5 |
| Deng et al.
| **** | - | *** | 7 |
| Dhakal et al.
| *** | - | *** | 6 |
| Johnston et al.
| *** | - | *** | 6 |
| Kumar et al.
| **** | - | ** | 6 |
| Rathnasinghe et al.
| *** | - | *** | 6 |
| Rosenke et al.
| *** | - | *** | 6 |
| Ryan et al.
| **** | - | ** | 6 |
| Sia et al.
| *** | - | *** | 6 |
| Song et al.
| *** | - | *** | 6 |
| Van der Moeren et al.
| *** | * | ** | 6 |
| Woolsey et al.
| *** | - | *** | 6 |
| Yamayoshi et al.
| *** | * | ** | 6 |