Study finds early Wuhan COVID cases largely undetected

By | July 16, 2020

“You can see there are several countries, including the U.S, Australia, and Spain in the last month, that have observed resurgences, and some of those countries did really well in April and May,” Lin said.

The paper builds on the researchers’ earlier work, released on a preprint server in early March and published in the journal JAMA in April. In mid-April Lin presented much of the group’s findings to the U.K. Parliament’s Science and Technology Committee, which wrote a letter to Prime Minister Boris Johnson with 10 findings and recommendations. Lin also served on Massachusetts’ COVID-19 task force in March. In June, her lab launched a website that allows users to check multiple COVID-19 metrics of countries all over the world as well as U.S. state and county levels in real time.

With the study, researchers wanted to better understand how easily the virus spreads, the number of undetected cases, their effects during an outbreak, and the efficacy of containment measures. They decided to look at the full transmission dynamics of the virus in Wuhan, the original epicenter, where strict restrictions effectively suppressed the outbreak.

The researchers examined 32,583 laboratory-confirmed coronavirus cases from Dec. 8, 2019, until March 8, 2020. They divided the dates into five time periods based on key events and interventions, such as the implementation of mandatory centralized isolations and quarantines of people infected or suspected of being infected.

The scientists found that the initial rate of transmission in Wuhan was very high but that it dropped considerably as multifaceted control measures were enacted. They estimate the number of new infections stemming from a single case (called the R0 but pronounced “R-naught”) was about 3.54 in the earliest period from Jan. 1 to 9. The second period, from Jan. 10 to 22, which saw a large influx of visitors to the city for Chinese New Year, also had a high transmission rate of about 3.32. The third, fourth, and fifth periods coincided with strict lockdowns followed by centralized isolations, quarantines, and universal screening, which resulted in declines to 1.18, 0.51, and 0.28, respectively. The figures represent a 96 percent drop from late January to early March.

Read More:  Wild West: Check out Kanye’s 4,524-acre Wyoming ranch amidst divorce

Based on their model, researchers estimate the total number of infections, including undetected cases, in Wuhan by March 8 was 249,187. Using data from Jan. 1 to Feb. 29, the model simulated a projected total of about 32,577 confirmed (or ascertained) cases by the same date. That number is close to the observed total of 32,583 and represents an overall ascertainment rate of 13 percent. This means that up to 87 percent of cases from January to March went undetected in Wuhan. The model also suggests the figure could be as low as 53 percent, but that assumes all cases were detected during the initial phase.

The researchers emphasize that further investigations, such as serological studies, are needed to confirm their estimates. They point out that their findings are consistent with the results of several emerging serological studies in Europe and the U.S., which also suggest that many infections were undetected, likely due to patients with mild or no symptoms.

Important lessons can be drawn from their study, the researchers said. Chief among them are that the large fraction of undetected cases in their model suggests the existence of many asymptomatic and mild cases, and that public health interventions seem effective at blocking transmission from both ascertained and unascertained cases, and in gaining control of the outbreak.

Read More:  Study Proves COVID Shots Can Cause Off-Target Immune Responses

“Lessons from Wuhan have demonstrated the effectiveness of vigorous and multifaceted containment efforts,” the authors wrote in the study. “In particular, despite relatively low ascertainment rates due to undetected symptoms of many cases, the outbreak could be controlled by extensive interventions to block the transmission from unascertained cases, such as wearing face masks, social distancing, and quarantining close contacts.”

In the paper, the scientists also used their model to predict the likelihood of a second wave of infections if all restrictions are lifted 14 days after the first day on which no cases are reported. They found a 97 percent chance of resurgence and that it would likely begin around day 34, owing largely to undetected infections.

In a more stringent scenario in which all restrictions are lifted only after 14 consecutive days without cases, the probability of resurgence drops to 32 percent, with the surge emerging around 42 days after restrictions are lifted.

“This nature of covertness — that’s what makes fighting COVID-19 so much more challenging,” Lin said. “This study illustrates that the cases of those who have tested positive are only the tip of the iceberg.”

Health & Medicine – Harvard Gazette