Household Transmission Dynamics of Seasonal Human Coronaviruses

Author:

Quandelacy Talia M1ORCID,Hitchings Matt D T2,Lessler Justin3,Read Jonathan M4,Vukotich Charles5,Azman Andrew S3ORCID,Salje Henrik6ORCID,Zimmer Shanta7,Gao Hongjiang8,Zheteyeva Yenlik8,Uzicanin Amra8,Cummings Derek A T23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology, University of Colorado Denver , Aurora, Colorado , USA

2. Department of Biology and Emerging Pathogens Institute, University of Florida , Gainesville, Florida , USA

3. Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore, Maryland , USA

4. Lancaster Medical School, Lancaster University , Lancaster , United Kingdom

5. School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh , Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania , USA

6. Department of Genetics, Cambridge University , Cambridge , United Kingdom

7. School of Medicine, University of Colorado-Denver , Aurora, Colorado , USA

8. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , Atlanta, Georgia , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Household transmission studies inform how viruses spread among close contacts, but few characterize household transmission of endemic coronaviruses. Methods We used data collected from 223 households with school-age children participating in weekly disease surveillance over 2 respiratory virus seasons (December 2015 to May 2017), to describe clinical characteristics of endemic human coronaviruses (HCoV-229E, HcoV-HKU1, HcoV-NL63, HcoV-OC43) infections, and community and household transmission probabilities using a chain-binomial model correcting for missing data from untested households. Results Among 947 participants in 223 households, we observed 121 infections during the study, most commonly subtype HCoV-OC43. Higher proportions of infected children (<19 years) displayed influenza-like illness symptoms than infected adults (relative risk, 3.0; 95% credible interval [CrI], 1.5–6.9). The estimated weekly household transmission probability was 9% (95% CrI, 6–13) and weekly community acquisition probability was 7% (95% CrI, 5–10). We found no evidence for differences in community or household transmission probabilities by age or symptom status. Simulations suggest that our study was underpowered to detect such differences. Conclusions Our study highlights the need for large household studies to inform household transmission, the challenges in estimating household transmission probabilities from asymptomatic individuals, and implications for controlling endemic CoVs.

Funder

US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

UKRI JUNIPER modelling consortium

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology and Allergy

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