Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Does The Amount of COVID Virus Impact Severity - The Importance of Infecting Dose or Viral Load

There has not been much written about the impact of infecting dose  - the amount of virus (viral load) that a person encounters during an infection event - has on severity of illness.  Or whether a high infecting dose (high viral load received when infected) is more likely to lead to illness in someone not considered high risk.  But that concept would certainly make sense.  A person being infected with hundreds of thousands of viral particles at one time (and all contained in a aerosolized droplet) would be harder for the body to fend off than a few viral particles, and this would also lead to a shorter time needed to reach a critical mass in the body.

While this is not an easy to conduct research, a group at Oxford discusses viral load with regard to healthcare workers based upon case histories....cases where those people working with those who are seriously sick and thus these workers are more likely to encounter high loads of virus spewed out by the highly infected.  The paper shows a number of cases where healthcare workers become sick themselves when working with severely ill.

Could this be why in some cases where those people who become infected and end up at the point of hospitalization, but are seemingly in good immune shape?  Could they have taken in a viral load so large it just overcomes the body's defenses, or in this case, triggers that cytokine storm?

Interesting, a Chinese study found that infected people had the highest viral load in their throat before the onset of symptoms.

More reason for everyone to wear masks.  Masks can reduce how much virus a person emits and then can reduce the amount of virus a healthy person takes in.  People will argue that cotton masks do not prevent a virus from getting through...and that is not the goal.  The goal is reduction.

https://covid19-evidence.paho.org/handle/20.500.12663/1368
SARS-CoV-2 viral load and the severity of COVID-19

March 26, 2020
Carl Heneghan, Jon Brassey, Tom Jefferson
Oxford COVID-19 Evidence Service Team
Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences
University of Oxford
Correspondence to carl.heneghan@phc.ox.ac.uk
Every day no matter which European state you live in, you are subject to a deluge of figures and opinions, often at odds. In this post, we look at some of them and draw our conclusions at the bottom.
We discuss evidence in SARs, SARs-CoV-2 and Influenza and the relationship of viral load and severity of the disease. We then present a summary of the sources that verify current healthcare workers who have died across different countries.

Background
The initial dose of virus and the amount of virus an individual has at any one time might worsen the severity of COVID 19 disease. Viral load is a measure of the number of viral particles present in an individual. Higher SARS-CoV-2 viral loads. might worsen outcomes, and data from China suggests the viral load is higher in patients with more severe disease. The amount of virus exposure at the start of infection – the infectious dose – may increase the severity of the illness and is also. linked to a higher viral load
Healthcare workers can be exposed more often due to numerous infected individuals exposures. In the early stages of an outbreak, initial contacts might not be recognized, particularly contacts with those with mild symptoms, or when the use of protective measures is suboptimal. Reducing the frequency and intensity of exposure to SARs-CoV-2 might reduce the infectious dose and result in less severe cases.
What is the evidence linking viral dose, viral load and the severity of disease?
The evidence suggests an association of viral dose with the severity of the disease. However, the evidence of the relationship is limited by the poor quality of many of the studies, the retrospective nature of the studies, small sample sizes and the potential problem with selection bias.
SARs:
An analysis of the nasopharyngeal viral load of 79 SARs patients in Amoy Gardens, Hong Kong, in the 2003 outbreak. reported that while patients admitted to hospital had initially similar illness severity regardless of proximity to the initial case. During the SARS outbreak, Amoy Gardens was placed under active surveillance, and residents underwent frequent examinations including nasopharyngeal specimens collected at an early stage.
The SARS pandemic in 2002-2003 affected 8,098 people with 774 deaths. An analysis of 142 patients with SARs reported that Viral load in Nasal Pharyngeal Aspirates between days 10 and 15 after the onset of symptoms was associated with:*
Oxygen desaturation, OR=3.1 (95% CI, 1.6- 6.2),
Mechanical ventilation, OR =11.3 (95% CI, 3.6-35.1)
Diarrhoea, OR=2.5 (95% CI, 1.3-5),
Hepatic dysfunction, OR =2.5 (95% CI, 1.2-5.2) and
Mortality (OR=54; 95% CI, 7-415).
*The small sample size of this study results in wide confidence intervals and uncertainty over the point estimates. Compared with other common viral respiratory diseases, the onset of peak viral load appeared to be delayed. Only those who sent the specimen on day 10 were included, which further limits firm conclusions to be drawn
SARs-Co-2:
A retrospective, multicentre cohort study, of 191 adult inpatients (median age 56.0) with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 from Jinyintan Hospital and Wuhan Pulmonary Hospital (Wuhan, China) discharged or died by Jan 31, 2020.
The median duration of viral shedding was 20·0 days (IQR 17·0–24·0) in survivors,
The longest observed duration of viral shedding in survivors was 37 days.
SARS-CoV-2 was detectable until death in non-survivors.
Severe lymphopenia was observed until death in non-survivors.
A preprint of the temporal patterns of viral shedding in 94 laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 patients and analysis of a separate sample of 77 infector-infectee transmission pairs modelled the following:
Infectiousness started from 2.5 days before symptom onset and reached its peak at 0.6 days before symptom onset.
The proportion of transmission before symptom onset (area under the curve) was 44%.
Infectiousness was estimated to decline relatively quickly within 7 days of illness onset
Influenza:
The link to the initial dose and subsequent severity of the disease is linked with the 1918-19 Spanish Flu pandemic. Simulation models showed that the infectious dose was related to the number of simultaneous contacts a susceptible person has with infectious ones; that severe cases of influenza result from higher infectious doses of the virus; and over-crowded places are the ideal environment for a susceptible person to be exposed to very high infectious doses of influenza.
High infectious dose and influenza disease progression have been shown in experimental animals;
The high infectious dose is associated with a higher viral load; and
The high infectious dose is associated with a smaller period of time to maximum viral load. [2]
[2] Influenza Infectious Dose May Explain the High Mortality of the Second and Third Wave of 1918–1919 Influenza Pandemic. PLoS ONE 5(7): e11655.
An analysis of 147 inpatients with influenza A (H3N2) infection (mean age, 72±16 years) reported major comorbidities and systemic corticosteroid were associated with slower viral clearance. Severe cases of influenza have more active and prolonged viral replication.
Healthcare Workers.
Reports across several countries report healthcare workers are more at risk of catching SARS-CoV-2 and potentially more severe. having COVID-19 disease. We use multiple sources as there is considerable variation in the number of deaths reported, which currently presents a confusing picture.
China:
4th March: Business Insider
– M ore than 3,300 healthcare workers infected (4% of the 81,285 reported infections)
– 13 healthcare workers have died, 0.39% of the 3,300 infected (95% CI, 0.23% to 0.67%).
Italy:
26th March: Independent:
– A t least 37 doctors have died after contracting coronavirus in Italy .
– Italian Federation of Surgeons and Dentists: List of 40 doctors who died during the Covid-19 epidemic.[1]
25th March: Integrated surveillance COVID-19: the main national data:
– 6 ,205 (9.2%) healthcare workers infected out of 67,814 cases
24th March: SBS.au:
– 24 doctors have died, 0.39% of the 6,205 infected (95% CI, 0.26% to 0.58%)
22nd March: CNN
– 4, 826 (9%) healthcare workers infected out of the 53,578 cases
– 18 doctors have died, 0.37% of those infected (95% CI, 0.23% to 0.59%)
[1] It is unclear if the doctors were frontline or treating the infected
[1] Not all died as a direct consequence of infection. E.g., On March 7, an anesthesiologist died due to end-stage disease.
Source data: Italy’s National Health Institute (ISS).
– Integrated surveillance COVID-19: the main national data
– infographic available in English (pdf 1,5 Mb)
Spain:
26th March: Metro
– Opposition conservative People’s Party leader Pablo Casado said: ‘Governments don’t send their soldiers to the front without helmets, flak jackets and ammunition. But our health workers don’t have any protection.’
25th March: Global News
– A t least three health care workers have died.
– On Wednesday, the number of medical personnel infected was nearly 6,500 nationally, (13.6%) of the country’s 47,600 total cases – 1% of the health system’s workforce.
24th March: Guardian
– 5,400 (13.6%) healthcare workers infected out of 39,673 cases~
24th March: NY Times
– In Madrid, 426 (6%) the medical staff (6%) have either tested positive or show symptoms of COVID
– In Igualada hospital, Catalonia, 1/3rd of the 1,000 hospital staff has been sent home.
– Protection measures were highly inadequate to protect staff: “When we already knew that the virus was circulating in hospitals, we were still being told that the usage of protective gear should be limited to specific circumstances,” said Juanjo Menéndez,
France:
24th March: NY Times
– Three doctors out of five who died of Covid-19 in France were GPs, one was a gynaecologist.
22nd March: The Local Fr
– A total of five doctors have now died in France
– Three doctors worked in the départements of Oise, Haut-Rhin and Moselle in the eastern area of France, worst affected by the coronavirus outbreak.
23rd March: RFI
– Three doctors now dead after being infected by Covid-19*
Philippines:
26th March: Bangkok Post
– Philippine Medical Association said Thursday a ninth doctor had died of the virus, and that health workers were not getting enough protection.
– “If it were up to me, test the frontliners first and test them again after seven days. Doctors could be carriers themselves,” Benito Atienza, vice president of the Philippine Medical Association told AFP.
26th March: France 24
– Nine doctors die from coronavirus in the Philippines
– The confirmed virus death toll in the Philippines is 38.
21st March: Philippine Heart Association (PHA) Facebook Post
– Announces one of its members died due to COVID-19:
Indonesia:
23rd March: Jakarta Globe
– Six Indonesian Doctors Die From Covid-19, Cases Exceed 500
22nd March: Jakarta Post
– Indonesian Doctors Association, or IDI, confirmed on Sunday that its six members had died from Covid-19
22nd March: The Star
– Three doctors die of Covid-19 in Indonesia, 23 health officers infected
– The Indonesian government’s spokesman for Covid-19-related matters Achmad Yurianto said the government was concerned by deaths of the doctors.
Source verification: Indonesian Doctors Doctors Association Facebook page
– IDI mourned deeply for the passing away of IDI fellow members as victims of the Covid-19 Pandemic
Nurses:
20th March: Nursing Times
– A small number of nurses around the world have died after contracting coronavirus, an international nursing body has confirmed.* Howard Catton, chief executive of the ICN, told Nursing Times that nurse deaths had been reported in Iran, Indonesia and Spain.
*no study data referred to.
What can we Conclude from the reports on healthcare worker deaths
If readers are confused by the mass of contradictory information, so are we.
What can be desumed by this post is that no one really knows what is going on, least of all governments and professional associations which seem at odds with news outlets as to how many of their members have died.
As our grandfathers used to say, when you do not know what is going on, do nothing. This is what we plan to do from our privileged position: observe and monitor the situation without jumping to conclusions.

Temporal dynamics in viral shedding and transmissibility of COVID-19
Xi He, Eric H. Y. Lau

, Peng Wu, Xilong Deng, Jian Wang, Xinxin Hao, Yiu Chung Lau, Jessica Y. Wong, Yujuan Guan, Xinghua Tan, Xiaoneng Mo, Yanqing Chen, Baolin Liao, Weilie Chen, Fengyu Hu, Qing Zhang, Mingqiu Zhong, Yanrong Wu, Lingzhai Zhao, Fuchun Zhang, Benjamin J. Cowling, Fang Li & Gabriel M. Leung
Nature Medicine volume 26, pages672–675(2020)

Abstract
We report temporal patterns of viral shedding in 94 patients with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 and modeled COVID-19 infectiousness profiles from a separate sample of 77 infector–infectee transmission pairs. We observed the highest viral load in throat swabs at the time of symptom onset, and inferred that infectiousness peaked on or before symptom onset. We estimated that 44% (95% confidence interval, 25–69%) of secondary cases were infected during the index cases’ presymptomatic stage, in settings with substantial household clustering, active case finding and quarantine outside the home. Disease control measures should be adjusted to account for probable substantial presymptomatic transmission.
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