Transmission roles of symptomatic and asymptomatic COVID-19 cases: a modelling study.

dc.contributor.author

Tan, Jianbin

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Ge, Yang

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Martinez, Leonardo

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Sun, Jimin

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Li, Changwei

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Westbrook, Adrianna

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Chen, Enfu

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Pan, Jinren

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Li, Yang

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Cheng, Wei

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Ling, Feng

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Chen, Zhiping

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Shen, Ye

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Huang, Hui

dc.date.accessioned

2024-01-08T19:57:23Z

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2024-01-08T19:57:23Z

dc.date.issued

2022-09

dc.description.abstract

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) asymptomatic cases are hard to identify, impeding transmissibility estimation. The value of COVID-19 transmissibility is worth further elucidation for key assumptions in further modelling studies. Through a population-based surveillance network, we collected data on 1342 confirmed cases with a 90-days follow-up for all asymptomatic cases. An age-stratified compartmental model containing contact information was built to estimate the transmissibility of symptomatic and asymptomatic COVID-19 cases. The difference in transmissibility of a symptomatic and asymptomatic case depended on age and was most distinct for the middle-age groups. The asymptomatic cases had a 66.7% lower transmissibility rate than symptomatic cases, and 74.1% (95% CI 65.9-80.7) of all asymptomatic cases were missed in detection. The average proportion of asymptomatic cases was 28.2% (95% CI 23.0-34.6). Simulation demonstrated that the burden of asymptomatic transmission increased as the epidemic continued and could potentially dominate total transmission. The transmissibility of asymptomatic COVID-19 cases is high and asymptomatic COVID-19 cases play a significant role in outbreaks.

dc.identifier

S0950268822001467

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0950-2688

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1469-4409

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/29671

dc.language

eng

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Cambridge University Press (CUP)

dc.relation.ispartof

Epidemiology and infection

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10.1017/s0950268822001467

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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0

dc.subject

Humans

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Disease Outbreaks

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Computer Simulation

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Middle Aged

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Asymptomatic Infections

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Epidemics

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COVID-19

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SARS-CoV-2

dc.title

Transmission roles of symptomatic and asymptomatic COVID-19 cases: a modelling study.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Tan, Jianbin|0000-0002-3264-1086

pubs.begin-page

e171

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Duke

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School of Medicine

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Staff

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Basic Science Departments

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Biostatistics & Bioinformatics

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Biostatistics & Bioinformatics, Division of Translational Biomedical

pubs.publication-status

Published

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150

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