Demand for longer quarantine period among common and uncommon COVID-19 infections: a scoping review.

IF 4.8 1区 医学 Q1 INFECTIOUS DISEASES Infectious Diseases of Poverty Pub Date : 2021-04-26 DOI:10.1186/s40249-021-00847-y
Zhi-Yao Li, Yu Zhang, Liu-Qing Peng, Rong-Rong Gao, Jia-Rui Jing, Jia-Le Wang, Bin-Zhi Ren, Jian-Guo Xu, Tong Wang
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Abstract

Background: As one of the non-pharmacological interventions to control the transmission of COVID-19, determining the quarantine duration is mainly based on the accurate estimates of the incubation period. However, patients with coarse information of the exposure date, as well as infections other than the symptomatic, were not taken into account in previously published studies. Thus, by using the statistical method dealing with the interval-censored data, we assessed the quarantine duration for both common and uncommon infections. The latter type includes the presymptomatic, the asymptomatic and the recurrent test positive patients.

Methods: As of 10 December 2020, information on cases have been collected from the English and Chinese databases, including Pubmed, Google scholar, CNKI (China National Knowledge Infrastructure) and Wanfang. Official websites and medias were also searched as data sources. All data were transformed into doubly interval-censored and the accelerated failure time model was applied. By estimating the incubation period and the time-to-event distribution of worldwide COVID-19 patients, we obtain the large percentiles for determining and suggesting the quarantine policies. For symptomatic and presymptomatic COVID-19 patients, the incubation time is the duration from exposure to symptom onset. For the asymptomatic, we substitute the date of first positive result of nucleic acid testing for that of symptom onset. Furthermore, the time from hospital discharge or getting negative test result to the positive recurrence has been calculated for recurrent positive patients.

Results: A total of 1920 laboratory confirmed COVID-19 cases were included. Among all uncommon infections, 34.1% (n = 55) of them developed symptoms or were identified beyond fourteen days. Based on all collected cases, the 95th and 99th percentiles were estimated to be 16.2 days (95% CI 15.5-17.0) and 22.9 days (21.7‒24.3) respectively. Besides, we got similar estimates based on merely symptomatic and presymptomatic infections as 15.1 days (14.4‒15.7) and 21.1 days (20.0‒22.2).

Conclusions: There are a certain number of infected people who require longer quarantine duration. Our findings well support the current practice of the extended active monitoring. To further prevent possible transmissions induced and facilitated by such infectious outliers after the 14-days quarantine, properly prolonging the quarantine duration could be prudent for high-risk scenarios and in regions with insufficient test resources.

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常见和不常见 COVID-19 感染对延长检疫期的需求:范围界定审查。
背景:作为控制 COVID-19 传播的非药物干预措施之一,确定隔离期限主要基于对潜伏期的准确估计。然而,在之前发表的研究中,暴露日期信息不准确的患者以及无症状的感染者并未被考虑在内。因此,通过使用处理间隔删失数据的统计方法,我们评估了常见感染和非常见感染的隔离期。后者包括无症状、无症状和反复检测呈阳性的患者:截至 2020 年 12 月 10 日,已从 Pubmed、Google scholar、CNKI(中国国家知识基础设施)和万方等中英文数据库中收集了病例信息。此外,还搜索了官方网站和媒体作为数据来源。所有数据均转换为双间隔删失数据,并应用加速失效时间模型。通过估算全球 COVID-19 患者的潜伏期和从时间到事件的分布,我们获得了用于确定和建议检疫政策的大百分位数。对于有症状和无症状的 COVID-19 患者,潜伏期是指从接触到症状出现的持续时间。对于无症状患者,我们用核酸检测首次出现阳性结果的日期来代替症状出现的日期。此外,我们还计算了复发阳性患者从出院或检测结果呈阴性到再次出现阳性的时间:结果:共纳入了 1920 例经实验室确诊的 COVID-19 病例。在所有非常见感染病例中,34.1%(n = 55)的病例在 14 天后出现症状或被确认。根据所有收集到的病例,第 95 百分位数和第 99 百分位数分别估计为 16.2 天(95% CI 15.5-17.0)和 22.9 天(21.7-24.3)。此外,根据仅有症状和无症状的感染情况,我们也得到了类似的估计值,分别为 15.1 天(14.4-15.7)和 21.1 天(20.0-22.2):有一定数量的感染者需要更长的隔离时间。我们的研究结果很好地支持了目前延长主动监测时间的做法。为了进一步防止这些传染性异常值在 14 天检疫后可能诱发和助长的传播,在高风险情况下和检测资源不足的地区,适当延长检疫时间可能是明智之举。
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来源期刊
Infectious Diseases of Poverty
Infectious Diseases of Poverty Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
16.70
自引率
1.20%
发文量
368
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: Infectious Diseases of Poverty is a peer-reviewed, open access journal that focuses on essential public health questions related to infectious diseases of poverty. It covers a wide range of topics and methods, including the biology of pathogens and vectors, diagnosis and detection, treatment and case management, epidemiology and modeling, zoonotic hosts and animal reservoirs, control strategies and implementation, new technologies, and their application. The journal also explores the impact of transdisciplinary or multisectoral approaches on health systems, ecohealth, environmental management, and innovative technologies. It aims to provide a platform for the exchange of research and ideas that can contribute to the improvement of public health in resource-limited settings. In summary, Infectious Diseases of Poverty aims to address the urgent challenges posed by infectious diseases in impoverished populations. By publishing high-quality research in various areas, the journal seeks to advance our understanding of these diseases and contribute to the development of effective strategies for prevention, diagnosis, and treatment.
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