Influence of setting-dependent contacts and protective behaviours on asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection amongst members of a UK university

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES Epidemics Pub Date : 2023-06-01 DOI:10.1016/j.epidem.2023.100688
Emma L. Fairbanks , Kirsty J. Bolton , Ru Jia , Grazziela P. Figueredo , Holly Knight , Kavita Vedhara
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Abstract

We survey 62 users of a university asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 testing service on details of their activities, protective behaviours and contacts in the 7 days prior to receiving a positive or negative SARS-CoV-2 PCR test result in the period October 2020–March 2021. The resulting data set is novel in capturing very detailed social contact history linked to asymptomatic disease status during a period of significant restriction on social activities. We use this data to explore 3 questions: (i) Did participation in university activities enhance infection risk? (ii) How do contact definitions rank in their ability to explain test outcome during periods of social restrictions? (iii) Do patterns in the protective behaviours help explain discrepancies between the explanatory performance of different contact measures? We classify activities into settings and use Bayesian logistic regression to model test outcome, computing posterior model probabilities to compare the performance of models adopting different contact definitions. Associations between protective behaviours, participant characteristics and setting are explored at the level of individual activities using multiple correspondence analysis (MCA). We find that participation in air travel or non-university work activities was associated with a positive asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 PCR test, in contrast to participation in research and teaching settings. Intriguingly, logistic regression models with binary measures of contact in a setting performed better than more traditional contact numbers or person contact hours (PCH). The MCA indicates that patterns of protective behaviours vary between setting, in a manner which may help explain the preference for any participation as a contact measure. We conclude that linked PCR testing and social contact data can in principle be used to test the utility of contact definitions, and the investigation of contact definitions in larger linked studies is warranted to ensure contact data can capture environmental and social factors influencing transmission risk.

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英国一所大学成员环境依赖性接触和保护行为对无症状SARS-CoV-2感染的影响
我们调查了一所大学无症状SARS-CoV-2检测服务的62名用户,了解他们在2020年10月至2021年3月期间接受SARS-CoV-2 PCR检测结果阳性或阴性之前7天内的活动、防护行为和接触者的详细情况。由此产生的数据集在捕获与社会活动受到重大限制期间无症状疾病状态相关的非常详细的社会接触史方面是新颖的。我们利用这些数据探讨了3个问题:(i)参加大学活动是否会增加感染风险?(ii)在社会限制时期,接触定义解释测试结果的能力如何?(iii)保护行为的模式是否有助于解释不同接触措施的解释性表现之间的差异?我们将活动分类为设置,并使用贝叶斯逻辑回归对测试结果进行建模,计算后验模型概率来比较采用不同接触定义的模型的性能。使用多重对应分析(MCA)在个体活动水平上探索保护行为、参与者特征和环境之间的关联。我们发现,与参与研究和教学环境相比,参加航空旅行或非大学工作活动与无症状SARS-CoV-2 PCR检测阳性相关。有趣的是,在一个设定中,具有二元接触度量的逻辑回归模型比更传统的联系号码或人员接触时间(PCH)表现得更好。MCA表明,保护行为的模式在不同的环境中有所不同,这可能有助于解释任何参与作为接触措施的偏好。我们的结论是,连锁PCR检测和社会接触数据原则上可用于测试接触定义的效用,并且有必要在更大规模的连锁研究中对接触定义进行调查,以确保接触数据能够捕获影响传播风险的环境和社会因素。
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来源期刊
Epidemics
Epidemics INFECTIOUS DISEASES-
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
7.90%
发文量
92
审稿时长
140 days
期刊介绍: Epidemics publishes papers on infectious disease dynamics in the broadest sense. Its scope covers both within-host dynamics of infectious agents and dynamics at the population level, particularly the interaction between the two. Areas of emphasis include: spread, transmission, persistence, implications and population dynamics of infectious diseases; population and public health as well as policy aspects of control and prevention; dynamics at the individual level; interaction with the environment, ecology and evolution of infectious diseases, as well as population genetics of infectious agents.
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