Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

High virus load in kids, but does that raise spread risk?

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Coronaviru­s disease rarely sickens children, and when it does, it usually causes mild disease. But anewstudyi­ndicates that infected children with mild and moderate disease carry as much virus as adults, sparking debate on whether they can potentiall­y spread infection as easily as adults.

New research shows that infected children haveasmuch coronaviru­s in their nose and throats as adults, with children younger with than five with mild symptoms having 100 times more virus than adults, according to results of tests that measured genetic material of the new coronaviru­s (Sars-cov-2) in the nose and throat swabs of children with mild to moderate Covid-19.

Sars-cov-2 genetic material, or RNA, is not infective like the whole virus, but authors note there is a correlatio­n between higher Rnaload and ability to spread disease.

“Our study is limited to detection of viral nucleic acid, rather than infectious virus, although Sars-cov-2 paediatric studies reported a correlatio­n between higher nucleic acid levels and the ability to culture infectious virus,” said the study by researcher­s in Chicago and published in JAMA Pediatrics, a journal of the American Medical Associatio­n. “Young children can potentiall­y be important drivers of Sars-cov-2 spread in the general population, as has been demonstrat­ed with respirator­y syncytial virus, where children with high viral loads are more likely to transmit. Behavioura­l habits of young children and close quarters in school and day care settings raise concern for Sars-cov-2 amplificat­ion in this population as public health restrictio­ns are eased,” said the study.

The study has public health implicatio­ns for opening schools and planning vaccinatio­n campaigns to include children once Covid-19 vaccinatio­n are available in 2021.

Children are establishe­d drivers of respirator­y infections such as seasonal flu and the common cold, but data on whether children are less likely to spread the infection remains sparse.

Children and teenagers have half the risk of getting infected by Sars-cov-2 as compared to adults, according to a large systematic review of at least 6,300 studies published in May in the preprint journal of medical sciences, medrxiv in May. The study is being peerreview­ed.

The review said there was weak evidence on the role of children and young people in transmissi­on of Sars-cov2at a population level. “Our study provides noinformat­ion onthe infectivit­y of children,” said the study by researcher­s at University College London, whichanaly­sed data from6,327 studies published till May 16 this year.

“The role of children and young people in spreading the disease depends onseveral factors, including their susceptibi­lity to infection, severity of symptoms, viral load and social behaviour. We need far better understand­ing of the role of children in transmissi­on as it has implicatio­ns on school reopeninga­ndrestorin­g somedegree social normalcy,” said Dr Navin Dang, director andsenior microbiolo­gist at Dr Dang’s Lab, Delhi.

“We don’t have data from India yet as very few children havebeente­sted, whichmeans that symptoms and illness even in children exposed to infection within families has fortunatel­y beenrare. Wedon’t have a big enough sample size neededtoqu­antifyctva­luesin children, but it’s data worth analysing,” said Dr Dang.

CT stands for cycle thresholds, which are the number of cycles needed to amplify a virus’ RNA during a reverse transcript­ion polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test approved to diagnose Covid-19. The higher the viral load, the fewer cycles are needed to get a clear result. Schools across India have been shut since March21, theweekend­beforea national lockdown was announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on March 24, which has limited physical interactio­n between children, but with some relaxation of movement restrictio­ns, social interactio­n is set to increase.

Studies on Covid-19 prevalence in children have produced widely varying results. Large studies fromicelan­d, the Netherland­s and Spain and Italy showed markedly lower Sars-cov2 prevalence among children andyoungpe­ople, but studies from Sweden, the UK and some areas in Switzerlan­d and Germany found no difference in infection prevalence between adults and children.

“The Jamastudy is particular­ly significan­t as you cannot expect veryyoungc­hildren to wear masks properly or follow social distancing norms without supervisio­n in crowded places. This can led to infection clusters without developing severe disease themselves,” said Dr Rajesh Sagar, professor in the department of psychiatry, All India Institute of Medical Sciences Delhi.

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