4.8 Article

Estimating clinical severity of COVID-19 from the transmission dynamics in Wuhan, China

Journal

NATURE MEDICINE
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 506-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-020-0822-7

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Funding

  1. Health and Medical Research Fund from the Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
  2. US National Institute of General Medical Sciences [U54GM088558]
  3. Fellowship Foundation Ramon Areces

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As of 29 February 2020 there were 79,394 confirmed cases and 2,838 deaths from COVID-19 in mainland China. Of these, 48,557 cases and 2,169 deaths occurred in the epicenter, Wuhan. A key public health priority during the emergence of a novel pathogen is estimating clinical severity, which requires properly adjusting for the case ascertainment rate and the delay between symptoms onset and death. Using public and published information, we estimate that the overall symptomatic case fatality risk (the probability of dying after developing symptoms) of COVID-19 in Wuhan was 1.4% (0.9-2.1%), which is substantially lower than both the corresponding crude or naive confirmed case fatality risk (2,169/48,557 = 4.5%) and the approximator(1) of deaths/deaths + recoveries (2,169/2,169 + 17,572 = 11%) as of 29 February 2020. Compared to those aged 30-59 years, those aged below 30 and above 59 years were 0.6 (0.3-1.1) and 5.1 (4.2-6.1) times more likely to die after developing symptoms. The risk of symptomatic infection increased with age (for example, at similar to 4% per year among adults aged 30-60 years).

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