1. Characterising within-hospital SARS-CoV-2 transmission events: a retrospective analysis integrating epidemiological and viral genomic data from a UK tertiary care setting across two pandemic waves
- Author
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Katherine E. Atkins, Mohammad Raza, Finlay Campbell, Thushan I de Silva, Stella Christou, Amy State, Marta Gallis, Nishchay Kakkar, Dhruv R. Shah, Peijun Zhang, Benjamin H Foulkes, Katie Johnson, H.K. Parsons, Sharon Hsu, Thibaut Jombart, Matthew Parker, Stavroula F Louka, Benjamin B Lindsey, Cariad Evans, David G Partridge, Stéphane Hué, Paige Wolverson, Ch. Julián Villabona-Arenas, Alexander J Keeley, and Anne Cori
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Isolation (health care) ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Tertiary care ,law.invention ,Transmission (mechanics) ,law ,Health care ,Epidemiology ,Emergency medicine ,Pandemic ,medicine ,business - Abstract
Structured abstractObjectivesTo characterise within-hospital SARS-CoV-2 transmission across two waves of the COVID-19 pandemic.DesignA retrospective Bayesian modelling study to reconstruct transmission chains amongst 2181 patients and healthcare workers using combined viral genomic and epidemiological data.SettingA large UK NHS Trust with over 1400 beds and employing approximately 17,000 staff.Participants780 patients and 522 staff testing SARS-CoV-2 positive between 1st March 2020 and 25th July 2020 (Wave 1); and 580 patients and 299 staff testing SARS-CoV-2 positive between 30th November 2020 and 24th January 2021 (Wave 2).Main outcome measuresTransmission pairs including who-infected-whom; location of transmission events in hospital; number of secondary cases from each individual, including differences in onward transmission from community and hospital onset patient cases.ResultsStaff-to-staff transmission was estimated to be the most frequent transmission type during Wave 1 (31.6% of observed hospital-acquired infections; 95% CI 26.9 to 35.8%), decreasing to 12.9% (95% CI 9.5 to 15.9%) in Wave 2. Patient-to-patient transmissions increased from 27.1% in Wave 1 (95% CI 23.3 to 31.4%) to 52.1% (95% CI 48.0 to 57.1%) in Wave 2, to become the predominant transmission type. Over 50% of hospital-acquired infections were concentrated in 8/120 locations in Wave 1 and 10/93 locations in Wave 2. Approximately 40% to 50% of hospital-onset patient cases resulted in onward transmission compared to less than 4% of definite community-acquired cases.ConclusionsPrevention and control measures that evolved during the COVID-19 pandemic may have had a significant impact on reducing infections between healthcare workers, but were insufficient during the second wave to prevent a high number of patient-to-patient transmissions. As hospital-acquired cases appeared to drive most onward transmissions, more frequent and rapid identification and isolation of these cases will be required to break hospital transmission chains in subsequent pandemic waves.
- Published
- 2021
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