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05Jun21


Mild, asymptomatic COVID-19 cases may be as infectious as severe ones


Only 8% of more than 25,000 German COVID-19 patients had high viral loads, one-third of whom were presymptomatic, asymptomatic, or mildly symptomatic, according to a study published yesterday in Science. High viral loads suggest greater infectiousness.

Led by researchers from the Charite-Universitatsmedizin Berlin, the study involved measuring SARS-CoV-2 viral loads and estimating probability of virus cell culture isolation in 25,381 coronavirus patients, 24% of whom were identified at testing facilities, 38% of whom were hospitalized, and 6% of whom were infected with the B117 variant first seen in the United Kingdom.

Viral load is the total number of copies of the SARS-CoV-2 genome in a patient sample, usually given as particles per milliliter of blood. Samples were collected from Feb 24, 2020, to Apr 2, 2021.

The researchers aimed to examine differences in infectiousness in presymptomatic people and those with mild or no symptoms by such factors as age, sex, and vaccination status; timing and degree of peak infectiousness, loss of infectiousness, increases and decreases in infectiousness rates, and how those rates are associated with symptom onset; and differences in infectiousness due to the properties of different virus variants.

B117 more infectious than other strains

Patients who were presymptomatic, asymptomatic, or mildly symptomatic had higher viral loads at their first positive coronavirus test than their hospitalized counterparts for all ages up to 70 years, and viral loads increased with age. Those infected with B117 had a mean viral load 1.05 times higher than those infected by other strains.

Youth had lower average and peak viral loads and an estimated 78% lower peak cell culture probability than adults, although the researchers cautioned that less viral material tends to be collected from children in general.

The researchers estimated a lag of 4.3 days from onset of viral shedding to peak viral load and the highest likelihood of cell culture isolation, which suggests that peak infectiousness could start several days before the appearance of any symptoms.

Culture probability was higher for patients with mild or no symptoms than for hospitalized participants, while probability for patients aged 0 to 5 years with mild or no symptoms was lower than that in those aged 20 to 65. Similarly, virus culture probability was an estimated 2.6 times higher for participants with B117 infections than in those infected with other strains.

"Laboratory studies may not as yet be in a position to provide a definitive explanation, but one thing is clear: B117 is more infectious than other variants," lead author Christian Drosten, MD, PhD, said in a Charite-Universitatsmedizin press release.

Asymptomatic, mildly symptomatic superspreaders

While patients admitted to the hospital are believed to have uniformly high peak viral loads, the researchers found that peak viral loads of nonhospitalized patients varied. Infections in patients with no or mild symptoms were identified, on average, 5.1 days after their viral loads peaked, compared with 7.4 days in other patients. Mean age of participants with high viral loads was 38 years.

"Our results indicate that PAMS [presymptomatic, asymptomatic, mild symptoms] subjects in apparently healthy groups can be expected to be as infectious as hospitalised patients at the time of detection," the authors wrote. "The relative levels of expected infectious virus shedding of PAMS subjects (including children) is of high importance because these people are circulating in the community and it is clear that they can trigger and fuel outbreaks."

Although viral load and cell culture virus isolation probability cannot determine infectiousness directly, especially in the context of society and behavior, they may generate the closest approximation of transmission odds, the authors said. Previous studies have also shown a strong link between SARS-CoV-2 viral load and transmissibility, they note.

Drosten said in the release that the findings "provide a virological foundation for the notion that a minority of infected individuals cause the majority of all transmissions. The fact that this includes so many people without any relevant symptoms underlines the importance of pandemic control measures such as social distancing and mandatory mask-wearing."

[Source: By Mary Van Beuselkom, CIDRAP, The University of Minnesota, 26May21]

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