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Evidence for pre‐symptomatic transmission of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) in China

Authors :
Zhaorui Chang
Junling Sun
H T Zhao
Xiang Ren
Yu Li
Xiaokun Yang
Taoran Nie
Jinzhao Cui
George F. Gao
Qiulan Chen
Zhongjie Li
Shuaibing Dong
Ying Cheng
Jianxing Yu
Zhili Li
Luzhao Feng
Liping Wang
Minrui Ren
Zijian Feng
Aiqin Zhu
Source :
Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Background Between mid‐January and early February, provinces of mainland China outside the epicentre in Hubei province were on high alert for importations and transmission of COVID‐19. Many properties of COVID‐19 infection and transmission were still not yet established. Methods We collated and analysed data on 449 of the earliest COVID‐19 cases detected outside Hubei province to make inferences about transmission dynamics and severity of infection. We analysed 64 clusters to make inferences on serial interval and potential role of pre‐symptomatic transmission. Results We estimated an epidemic doubling time of 5.3 days (95% confidence interval (CI): 4.3, 6.7) and a median incubation period of 4.6 days (95% CI: 4.0, 5.2). We estimated a serial interval distribution with mean 5.7 days (95% CI: 4.7, 6.8) and standard deviation 3.5 days, and effective reproductive number was 1.98 (95% CI: 1.68, 2.35). We estimated that 32/80 (40%) of transmission events were likely to have occurred prior to symptoms onset in primary cases. Secondary cases in clusters had less severe illness on average than cluster primary cases. Conclusions The majority of transmissions are occurring around illness onset in an infected person, and pre‐symptomatic transmission does play a role. Detection of milder infections among the secondary cases may be more reflective of true disease severity.

Details

ISSN :
17502659 and 17502640
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3c5313e26d572a5896c1a45084de7d7b