4.8 Article

The implications of silent transmission for the control of COVID-19 outbreaks

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2008373117

Keywords

COVID-19; contact tracing; case isolation

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research Grant [OV4 -170643]
  2. NIH [1RO1AI151176-01]
  3. NSF RAPID [2027755]
  4. NSF [CCF-1918784]
  5. NIH Health [1K01AI141576-01]
  6. Division Of Environmental Biology
  7. Direct For Biological Sciences [2027755] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Since the emergence of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), unprecedented movement restrictions and social distancing measures have been implemented worldwide. The socioeconomic repercussions have fueled calls to lift these measures. In the absence of population-wide restrictions, isolation of infected individuals is key to curtailing transmission. However, the effectiveness of symptom-based isolation in preventing a resurgence depends on the extent of presymptomatic and asymptomatic transmission. We evaluate the contribution of presymptomatic and asymptomatic transmission based on recent individual-level data regarding infectiousness prior to symptom onset and the asymptomatic proportion among all infections. We found that the majority of incidences may be attributable to silent transmission from a combination of the presymptomatic stage and asymptomatic infections. Consequently, even if all symptomatic cases are isolated, a vast outbreak may nonetheless unfold. We further quantified the effect of isolating silent infections in addition to symptomatic cases, finding that over one-third of silent infections must be isolated to suppress a future outbreak below 1% of the population. Our results indicate that symptom-based isolation must be supplemented by rapid contact tracing and testing that identifies asymptomatic and presymptomatic cases, in order to safely lift current restrictions and minimize the risk of resurgence.

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