Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Study shows infections far higher than reported

CDC: In parts of US, up to 13 times more people caught virus

- By Apoorva Mandavilli The New York Times

The number of people infected with the coronaviru­s in different parts of the United States was anywhere from two to 13 times higher than the reported rates for those regions, according to data released Tuesday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The findings suggest that large numbers of people who did not have symptoms or did not seek medical care may have kept the virus circulatin­g in their communitie­s.

The study indicates that even the hardest-hit area in the study — New York City, where nearly 1 in 4 people has been exposed to the virus — is nowhere near achieving herd immunity, the level of exposure at which the virus would stop spreading in a particular city or region. Experts believe that 60% of people in an area would need to have been exposed to the coronaviru­s to reach herd immunity.

The analysis, based on antibody tests, is the largest of its kind to date; a study of a subset of cities and states was released last month.

“These data continue to show that the number of people who have been infected with the virus that causes COVID-19 far exceeds the number of reported cases,” said Dr. Fiona Havers, the CDC researcher who led the study. “Many of these people likely had no symptoms or mild illness and may have had no idea that they were infected.”

About 40% of infected people do not develop symptoms, but they may still pass the virus on to others. The United States now tests roughly 700,000 people a day. The new results highlight the need for much more testing to detect infection levels and contain the viral spread in various parts of the country.

For example, in Missouri, the prevalence of infections is 13 times the reported rate, suggesting that the state missed most people with the virus who may have contribute­d to its outsized outbreak.

Havers emphasized that even those who do not know their infection status should wear cloth face coverings, practice social distancing and wash their hands frequently.

The researcher­s analyzed blood samples from people who had routine clinical tests or were hospitaliz­ed to determine if they had antibodies against the coronaviru­s — evidence of prior infection. They had released early data from six cities and states in June. The study published in the journal JAMA on Tuesday expands that research by including four more regions. They also posted data from later time periods for eight of those 10 sites to the CDC’s website Tuesday.

The results indicate that in vast swaths of the country, the coronaviru­s still has touched only a small fraction of the population. In Utah, for example, just over 1% of people had been exposed to the virus by early June. The rate was 2.2% for Minneapoli­s-St. Paul as of the first week of June and 3.6% for the Philadelph­ia metropolit­an region as of May 30.

In some regions, the gap between estimated infections and reported cases decreased as testing capacity and reporting improved. New York City, for example, showed a 12-fold difference between actual infections and the reported rate in early April, and a 10-fold difference in early May.

“This is not coming as a shock or surprise to epidemiolo­gists,” Carl Bergstrom, an infectious diseases expert at the University of Washington, said in an email. “All along, we have expected that only about 10% of the cases will be reported.”

Tracking the numbers over time can provide useful insights into the virus’s spread and about a region’s capacity to cope with the epidemic, other experts said.

“The fact that they’re sort of marking it out over time and looking at it over a longer duration will actually be super-informativ­e,” said Dr. Rochelle Walensky, a researcher at Harvard University who wrote an editorial accompanyi­ng the JAMA paper.

For example, South Florida ticked up to 2.9% as of April 24 from 1.9% just two weeks earlier. Missouri’s numbers barely budged from 2.7% as of April 26 to 2.8% as of May 30. Numbers for both regions are likely to be much higher in the next round of analyses because of the surge of infections in those regions since those dates.

The CDC study does have limitation­s, Walensky said, because many of the people who ventured out during the lockdowns for tests or were hospitaliz­ed would have been severely ill and might not have been representa­tive of the general population.

Each region also varied “in terms of where they were on their own epidemic curve and varied in terms of the amount of testing that they did,” she said.

The study also did not collect data on race, ethnicity, diagnostic and symptom history or prevention behaviors.

 ?? COLTER PETERSON/ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH ?? Trace Robinson receives a coronaviru­s test April 23 in St. Louis. The prevalence of infections in Missouri is 13 times the reported rate, according to newly released CDC data.
COLTER PETERSON/ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH Trace Robinson receives a coronaviru­s test April 23 in St. Louis. The prevalence of infections in Missouri is 13 times the reported rate, according to newly released CDC data.

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