Influenza virus shedding and symptoms: Dynamics and implications from a multiseason household transmission study

Author:

Morris Sinead E12ORCID,Nguyen Huong Q3ORCID,Grijalva Carlos G4,Hanson Kayla E3ORCID,Zhu Yuwei4,Biddle Jessica E1,Meece Jennifer K3,Halasa Natasha B4,Chappell James D4ORCID,Mellis Alexandra M1,Reed Carrie1ORCID,Biggerstaff Matthew1ORCID,Belongia Edward A3,Talbot H Keipp4,Rolfes Melissa A1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Influenza Division, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , Atlanta, GA 30329 , USA

2. Goldbelt Professional Services , Chesapeake, VA 23320 , USA

3. Marshfield Clinic Research Institute , Marshfield, WI 54449 , USA

4. Vanderbilt University Medical Center , Nashville, TN 37232 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Isolation of symptomatic infectious persons can reduce influenza transmission. However, virus shedding that occurs without symptoms will be unaffected by such measures. Identifying effective isolation strategies for influenza requires understanding the interplay between individual virus shedding and symptom presentation. From 2017 to 2020, we conducted a case-ascertained household transmission study using influenza real-time RT-qPCR testing of nasal swabs and daily symptom diary reporting for up to 7 days after enrolment (≤14 days after index onset). We assumed real-time RT-qPCR cycle threshold (Ct) values were indicators of quantitative virus shedding and used symptom diaries to create a score that tracked influenza-like illness (ILI) symptoms (fever, cough, or sore throat). We fit phenomenological nonlinear mixed-effects models stratified by age and vaccination status and estimated two quantities influencing isolation effectiveness: shedding before symptom onset and shedding that might occur once isolation ends. We considered different isolation end points (including 24 h after fever resolution or 5 days after symptom onset) and assumptions about the infectiousness of Ct shedding trajectories. Of the 116 household contacts with ≥2 positive tests for longitudinal analyses, 105 (91%) experienced ≥1 ILI symptom. On average, children <5 years experienced greater peak shedding, longer durations of shedding, and elevated ILI symptom scores compared with other age groups. Most individuals (63/105) shed <10% of their total shed virus before symptom onset, and shedding after isolation varied substantially across individuals, isolation end points, and infectiousness assumptions. Our results can inform strategies to reduce transmission from symptomatic individuals infected with influenza.

Funder

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Marshfield Clinic Research Institute

University Medical Center

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference61 articles.

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