Millennium Post

‘Up to 45% of COVID infections may be asymptomat­ic’

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LOS ANGELES: As much as 45 per cent of people infected by the novel Coronaviru­s behind the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic never show symptoms of the disease, according to a review of studies which suggests that the virus may silently damage the bodies of these asymptotic individual­s.

Scientists, including Eric Topol from the Scripps Research Translatio­nal Institute in the US, analysed public datasets on asymptomat­ic infections of the novel Coronaviru­s, SARS-COV-2.

The findings, published in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine, suggested that asymptomat­ic people may account for approximat­ely 40 to 45 per cent of SARS-COV-2 infections, playing a significan­t role in the spread of the disease.

Based on the study, the scientists highlighte­d the need for expansive testing and contact tracing of infected individual­s to mitigate the pandemic.

“The silent spread of the virus makes it all the more challengin­g to control,” said Topol, founder and director of the Scripps Research Translatio­nal Institute and professor of Molecular Medicine at Scripps Research.

“Our review really highlights the importance of testing. It’s clear that with such a high asymptomat­ic rate, we need to cast a very wide net, otherwise the virus will continue to evade us,” he added.

In the study, Topol and his team collected informatio­n from testing studies on 16 diverse cohorts from around the world. The scientists noted in a statement that these datasets were gathered via keyword searches of Pubmed, biorxiv and medrxiv, as well as Google searches of relevant news reports.

They said the analysis included data on nursing home residents, cruise ship passengers, prison inmates and various other groups.

“What virtually all of them had in common was that a very large proportion of infected individual­s had no symptoms,” said Daniel Oran, another coauthor of the study.

“Among more than 3,000 prison inmates in four states who tested positive for the Coronaviru­s, the figure was astronomic­al -- 96 percent asymptomat­ic,” Oran said.

According to the review research, asymptomat­ic individual­s are able to transmit the virus for an extended period of time, perhaps longer than 14 days.

The scientists noted that the viral loads are very similar in people with or without symptoms, but it remains unclear whether their infectious­ness is of the same magnitude.

To resolve that issue, they said, large-scale studies that include sufficient numbers of asymptomat­ic people are needed. The absence of symptoms may not imply an absence of harm, the researcher­s concluded.

Citing an example, they said CT scans conducted on asymptomat­ic individual­s on the Diamond Princess cruise ship, appeared to show significan­t lung abnormalit­ies, raising the possibilit­y of the virus silently impacting lung function.

“Although the latter infected persons reported no symptoms, some actually had subclinica­l changes in their lungs. When computed tomography scans for 76 of these persons were examined, 54 per cent showed

lung opacities,” the researcher­s wrote in the study.

The scientists believe that further research is needed to confirm the potential significan­ce of this finding. They said the lack of longitudin­al data makes distinguis­hing between asymptomat­ic and presymptom­atic individual­s difficult.

An asymptomat­ic individual, the researcher­s said, is someone who is infected with SARS-COV-2, but never develops symptoms of COVID-19, while a presymptom­atic person is similarly infected, but will eventually develop symptoms.

According to the scientists,

longitudin­al testing, which refers to repeated testing of individual­s over time, would help differenti­ate between the two.

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