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Viral Determinants of Acute COVID-19 Symptoms in a Nonhospitalized Adult Population in the Pre-Omicron Era.

Authors :
Goldberg, Sarah
Goldberg, Sarah
Lu, Scott
Garcia-Knight, Miguel
Davidson, Michelle
Tassetto, Michel
Anglin, Khamal
Pineda-Ramirez, Jesus
Chen, Jessica
Rugart, Paulina
Mathur, Sujata
Forman, Carrie
Donohue, Kevin
Abedi, Glen
Saydah, Sharon
Briggs-Hagen, Melissa
Midgley, Claire
Andino, Raul
Glidden, David
Martin, Jeffrey
Kelly, J
Peluso, Michael
Goldberg, Sarah
Goldberg, Sarah
Lu, Scott
Garcia-Knight, Miguel
Davidson, Michelle
Tassetto, Michel
Anglin, Khamal
Pineda-Ramirez, Jesus
Chen, Jessica
Rugart, Paulina
Mathur, Sujata
Forman, Carrie
Donohue, Kevin
Abedi, Glen
Saydah, Sharon
Briggs-Hagen, Melissa
Midgley, Claire
Andino, Raul
Glidden, David
Martin, Jeffrey
Kelly, J
Peluso, Michael
Source :
Open Forum Infectious Diseases; vol 10, iss 8; 2328-8957
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The influence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) RNA level and presence of infectious virus on symptom occurrence is poorly understood, particularly among nonhospitalized individuals. METHODS: The study included 85 nonhospitalized, symptomatic adults, who were enrolled from September 2020 to November 2021. Data from a longitudinal cohort studied over 28 days was used to analyze the association of individual symptoms with SARS-CoV-2 viral RNA load, or the presence or level of infectious (culturable) virus. Presence of infectious virus and viral RNA load were assessed daily, depending on specimen availability, and amount of infectious virus was assessed on the day of maximum RNA load. Participants were surveyed for the start and end dates of 31 symptoms at enrollment and at days 9, 14, 21, and 28; daily symptom presence was determined analytically. We describe symptoms and investigate their possible association with viral determinants through a series of single or pooled (multiple days across acute period) cross-sectional analyses. RESULTS: There was an association between viral RNA load and the same-day presence of many individual symptoms. Additionally, individuals with infectious virus were more than three times as likely to have a concurrent fever than individuals without infectious virus, and more than two times as likely to have concurrent myalgia, chills, headache, or sore throat. CONCLUSIONS: We found evidence to support the association of viral RNA load and infectious virus on some, but not all symptoms. Fever was most strongly associated with the presence of infectious virus; this may support the potential for symptom-based isolation guidance for COVID-19.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Open Forum Infectious Diseases; vol 10, iss 8; 2328-8957
Notes :
application/pdf, Open Forum Infectious Diseases vol 10, iss 8 2328-8957
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1401035298
Document Type :
Electronic Resource