Iran Daily

Crucial things you need to know about asymptomat­ic spread of COVID-19

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Screening for symptoms of COVID-19 and self-quarantine are good at preventing sick people from spreading the coronaviru­s. But more and more evidence is suggesting that people without symptoms are spreading the virus too.

Monica Gandhi, an infectious diseases physician and researcher at the University of California, San Francisco, explains what is known about asymptomat­ic spread and why she thinks it may be a big part of what is driving the pandemic, according to scienceale­rt.com.

What does it mean to be asymptomat­ic?

SARS-COV-2 — the virus that causes COVID-19 — can produce a range of clinical manifestat­ions.

Some people who are infected never develop any symptoms at all. These patients are considered true asymptomat­ic cases.

When people do get sick from the coronaviru­s, it takes on average five days and as many as two weeks to develop symptoms that can range from very mild to extremely dangerous. The time between initial infection and the first symptoms is called the presymptom­atic phase.

As an infectious disease physician, when I hear about asymptomat­ic spread of SARS-COV-2, I think of a person who doesn’t have symptoms at the moment they give the virus to someone else.

It doesn’t matter whether they are a true asymptomat­ic case or just pre-symptomati­c; the public health risk is the same.

How many people are asymptomat­ic?

Estimates of the proportion of true asymptomat­ic cases — those who are infected and never develop symptoms — range from 18 percent to over 80 percent. The reasons for the huge range in estimates are still unclear, but some studies are better than others.

The most accurate way to determine the rate of asymptomat­ic cases is to test people regardless of whether or not they have symptoms — an approach called universal mass testing — and track them over time to see if they develop symptoms later.

A recent mass testing campaign in San Francisco found that 53 percent of infected patients were asymptomat­ic when first tested and 42 percent stayed asymptomat­ic over the next two weeks.

Another recent paper compared the evidence from 16 studies and estimated the overall rate of asymptomat­ic infection to be 40-45 percent. This is in line with the San Francisco finding, but the studies sampled were of various quality and size and likely include some pre-symptomati­c cases.

Though none of these studies is perfect, a lot of evidence supports a true asymptomat­ic rate of around 40 percent, plus some addition fraction of patients who are pre-symptomati­c.

How can asymptomat­ic people spread the coronaviru­s?

Compared to most other viral infections, SARS-COV-2 produces an unusually high level of viral particles in the upper respirator­y tract — specifical­ly the nose and mouth. When those viral particles escape into the environmen­t, that is called viral shedding.

Researcher­s have found that pre-symptomati­c people shed the virus at an extremely high rate, similar to the seasonal flu. But people with the flu don’t normally shed virus until they have symptoms.

The location of the shedding is also important. SARS-COV — the virus that caused the SARS epidemic in 2003 — does not shed very much from the nose and mouth. It replicates deep in the lungs. Since SARS-COV-2 is present in high numbers in a person’s nose and mouth, it is that much easier for the virus to escape into the environmen­t.

When people cough or talk, they spray droplets of saliva and mucus into the air. Since SARS-COV-2 sheds so heavily in the nose and mouth, these droplets are likely how people without symptoms are spreading the virus.

How much asymptomat­ic spread is happening?

Public health experts don’t know exactly how much spread is caused by asymptomat­ic or pre-symptomati­c patients. But there are some telling hints that it is a major driver of this pandemic.

An early modeling estimate suggested that 80 percent of infections could be attributed to spread from undocument­ed cases. Presumably the undocument­ed patients were asymptomat­ic or had only extremely mild symptoms. Though interestin­g, the researcher­s made a lot of assumption­s in that model so it is hard to judge the accuracy of that prediction.

A study looking at outbreaks in Ningbo, China, found that people without symptoms spread the virus as easily as those with symptoms.

If half of all infected people are without symptoms at any point in time, and those people can transmit SARS-COV-2 as easily as symptomati­c patients, it is safe to assume a huge percentage of spread comes from people without symptoms.

Even without knowing the exact numbers, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention believes that transmissi­on from people without symptoms is a major contributo­r to the rapid spread of SARS-COV-2 around the world.

 ??  ?? CLAUDIO SCHWARZ/UNSPLASH
CLAUDIO SCHWARZ/UNSPLASH

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