Largest COVID-19 contact-tracing study to date finds children key to spread
MORGAN KELLY ・ PRINCETON
ENVIRONMENTAL INSTITUTE
A study of more than a half-million people in India who were exposed to the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 suggests that the virus’ continued spread is driven by only a small percentage of those who become infected.
Furthermore, children and young
adults were found to be potentially much more important to transmitting the
virus — especially within households — than previous studies have
identified, according to a paper by researchers from the United States and
India published
Sept. 30 in the journal Science.
Researchers from the Princeton Environmental Institute (PEI), Johns Hopkins University and the University of California-Berkeley worked with public health officials in the southeast Indian states of Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh to track the infection pathways and mortality rate of 575,071 individuals who were exposed to 84,965 confirmed cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by SARS-CoV-2.
It is the largest
contact-tracing study — which is the process of identifying people who came
into contact with an infected person — conducted in the world for any disease.
Lead researcher Ramanan
Laxminarayan, a senior research scholar in PEI, said that the
paper is the first large study to capture the extraordinary extent to which
SARS-CoV-2 hinges on “superspreading,” in which a small percentage of the
infected population passes the virus on to more people. The researchers found
that 71% of infected individuals did not infect any of their contacts, while a
mere 8% of infected individuals accounted for 60% of new infections.
“Our study presents the largest
empirical demonstration of superspreading that we are aware of in any
infectious disease,” Laxminarayan said. “Superspreading events are the rule
rather than the exception when one is looking at the spread of COVID-19, both
in India and likely in all affected places.”
The findings provide extensive
insight into the spread and deadliness of COVID-19 in countries such as India —
which has experienced more than 96,000 deaths from the disease — that have a
high incidence of resource-limited populations, the researchers reported. They
found that coronavirus-related deaths in India occurred, on average, six days
after hospitalization compared to an average of 13 days in the United States.
Also, deaths from coronavirus in India have been concentrated among people aged
50-64, which is slightly younger than the 60-plus at-risk population in the
United States.
The researchers also reported,
however, the first large-scale evidence that the implementation of a
country-wide shutdown in India led to substantial reductions in coronavirus
transmission.
The researchers found that the
chances of a person with coronavirus, regardless of their age, passing it on to
a close contact ranged from 2.6% in the community to 9% in the household. The
researchers found that children and young adults — who made up one-third of
COVID cases — were especially key to transmitting the virus in the studied
populations.
“Kids are very efficient
transmitters in this setting, which is something that hasn’t been firmly
established in previous studies,” Laxminarayan said. “We found that reported
cases and deaths have been more concentrated in younger cohorts than we
expected based on observations in higher-income countries.”
Children and young adults were much
more likely to contract coronavirus from people their own age, the study found.
Across all age groups, people had a greater chance of catching the coronavirus
from someone their own age. The overall probability of catching coronavirus
ranged from 4.7% for low-risk contacts up to 10.7% for high-risk contacts.
The study, “Epidemiology and
transmission dynamics of COVID-19 in two Indian states,” was published Sept. 30
by the journal Science. The work was supported by the National Science
Foundation and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.