Abstract
Importance
Understanding the susceptibility and infectiousness of children and adolescents in comparison to adults is important to appreciate their role in the COVID-19 pandemic.
Objective
To determine SARS-CoV-2 susceptibility and infectiousness of children and adolescents with adults as comparator for three variants (wild-type, alpha, delta) in the household setting. We aimed to identify the effects independent of vaccination or prior infection.
Data sources
We searched EMBASE, PubMed and medRxiv up to January 2022.
Study selection
Two reviewers independently identified studies providing secondary household attack rates (SAR) for SARS-CoV-2 infection in children (0–9 years), adolescents (10–19 years) or both compared with adults (20 years and older).
Data extraction and synthesis
Two reviewers independently extracted data, assessed risk of bias and performed a random-effects meta-analysis model.
Main outcomes and measures
Odds ratio (OR) for SARS-CoV-2 infection comparing children and adolescents with adults stratified by wild-type (ancestral type), alpha, and delta variant, respectively. Susceptibility was defined as the secondary attack rate (SAR) among susceptible household contacts irrespective of the age of the index case. Infectiousness was defined as the SAR irrespective of the age of household contacts when children/adolescents/adults were the index case.
Results
Susceptibility analysis: We included 27 studies (308,681 contacts), for delta only one (large) study was available. Compared to adults, children and adolescents were less susceptible to the wild-type and delta, but equally susceptible to alpha. Infectiousness analysis: We included 21 studies (201,199 index cases). Compared to adults, children and adolescents were less infectious when infected with the wild-type and delta. Alpha -related infectiousness remained unclear, 0–9 year old children were at least as infectious as adults. Overall SAR among household contacts varied between the variants.
Conclusions and relevance
When considering the potential role of children and adolescents, variant-specific susceptibility, infectiousness, age group and overall transmissibility need to be assessed.
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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