4.7 Article

Evolving Epidemiological Characteristics of COVID-19 in Hong Kong From January to August 2020: Retrospective Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH
Volume 23, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

JMIR PUBLICATIONS, INC
DOI: 10.2196/26645

Keywords

SARS-CoV-2; COVID-19; evolving epidemiology; containment delay; serial interval; Hong Kong; epidemiology; public health; transmission; China; intervention; case study

Funding

  1. Chinese University of Hong Kong [2019.020]
  2. Centre for Health Systems and Policy Research - Tung Foundation
  3. Health and Medical Research Fund [INF-CUHK-1, 17160302, 18170312]
  4. General Research Fund [14112818, 24104920]
  5. Wellcome Trust Fund (United Kingdom) [200861/Z/16/Z]
  6. Wellcome Trust [200861/Z/16/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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This study characterized the epidemiology of the first two epidemic waves of COVID-19 in Hong Kong, revealing changes in asymptomatic case proportions and peak R-t values. The findings indicated that interventions and cluster involvement affected containment delays, while serial intervals decreased over time and were influenced by mobility. The study emphasized the importance of vigilance against COVID-19 and suggested the need to consider temporal variations in epidemiological parameters for outbreak control.
Background: COVID-19 has plagued the globe, with multiple SARS-CoV-2 clusters hinting at its evolving epidemiology. Since the disease course is governed by important epidemiological parameters, including containment delays (time between symptom onset and mandatory isolation) and serial intervals (time between symptom onsets of infector-infectee pairs), understanding their temporal changes helps to guide interventions. Objective: This study aims to characterize the epidemiology of the first two epidemic waves of COVID-19 in Hong Kong by doing the following: (1) estimating the containment delays, serial intervals, effective reproductive number (R-t), and proportion of asymptomatic cases; (2) identifying factors associated with the temporal changes of the containment delays and serial intervals; and (3) depicting COVID-19 transmission by age assortativity and types of social settings. Methods: We retrieved the official case series and the Apple mobility data of Hong Kong from January-August 2020. The empirical containment delays and serial intervals were fitted to theoretical distributions, and factors associated with their temporal changes were quantified in terms of percentage contribution (the percentage change in the predicted outcome from multivariable regression models relative to a predefined comparator). R-t was estimated with the best fitted distribution for serial intervals. Results: The two epidemic waves were characterized by imported cases and clusters of local cases, respectively. R-t peaked at 2.39 (wave 1) and 3.04 (wave 2). The proportion of asymptomatic cases decreased from 34.9% (0-9 years) to 12.9% (>= 80 years). Log-normal distribution best fitted the 1574 containment delays (mean 5.18 [SD 3.04] days) and the 558 serial intervals (17 negative; mean 4.74 [SD 4.24] days). Containment delays decreased with involvement in a cluster (percentage contribution: 10.08%-20.73%) and case detection in the public health care sector (percentage contribution: 27.56%, 95% CI 22.52%-32.33%). Serial intervals decreased over time (6.70 days in wave 1 versus 4.35 days in wave 2) and with tertiary transmission or beyond (percentage contribution: -50.75% to -17.31%), but were lengthened by mobility (percentage contribution: 0.83%). Transmission within the same age band was high (18.1%). Households (69.9%) and social settings (20.3%) were where transmission commonly occurred. Conclusions: First, the factors associated with reduced containment delays suggested government-enacted interventions were useful for achieving outbreak control and should be further encouraged. Second, the shorter serial intervals associated with the composite mobility index calls for empirical surveys to disentangle the role of different contact dimensions in disease transmission. Third, the presymptomatic transmission and asymptomatic cases underscore the importance of remaining vigilant about COVID-19. Fourth, the time-varying epidemiological parameters suggest the need to incorporate their temporal variations when depicting the epidemic trajectory. Fifth, the high proportion of transmission events occurring within the same age group supports the ban on gatherings outside of households, and underscores the need for residence-centered preventive measures.

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