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Investigation of a COVID-19 outbreak in Germany resulting from a single travel-associated primary case: a case series
BACKGROUND: In December, 2019, the newly identified severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) emerged in Wuhan, China, causing COVID-19, a respiratory disease presenting with fever, cough, and often pneumonia. WHO has set the strategic objective to interrupt spread of SARS-CoV-2 w...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Elsevier Ltd.
2020
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7228725/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32422201 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(20)30314-5 |
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author | Böhmer, Merle M Buchholz, Udo Corman, Victor M Hoch, Martin Katz, Katharina Marosevic, Durdica V Böhm, Stefanie Woudenberg, Tom Ackermann, Nikolaus Konrad, Regina Eberle, Ute Treis, Bianca Dangel, Alexandra Bengs, Katja Fingerle, Volker Berger, Anja Hörmansdorfer, Stefan Ippisch, Siegfried Wicklein, Bernd Grahl, Andreas Pörtner, Kirsten Muller, Nadine Zeitlmann, Nadine Boender, T Sonia Cai, Wei Reich, Andreas an der Heiden, Maria Rexroth, Ute Hamouda, Osamah Schneider, Julia Veith, Talitha Mühlemann, Barbara Wölfel, Roman Antwerpen, Markus Walter, Mathias Protzer, Ulrike Liebl, Bernhard Haas, Walter Sing, Andreas Drosten, Christian Zapf, Andreas |
author_facet | Böhmer, Merle M Buchholz, Udo Corman, Victor M Hoch, Martin Katz, Katharina Marosevic, Durdica V Böhm, Stefanie Woudenberg, Tom Ackermann, Nikolaus Konrad, Regina Eberle, Ute Treis, Bianca Dangel, Alexandra Bengs, Katja Fingerle, Volker Berger, Anja Hörmansdorfer, Stefan Ippisch, Siegfried Wicklein, Bernd Grahl, Andreas Pörtner, Kirsten Muller, Nadine Zeitlmann, Nadine Boender, T Sonia Cai, Wei Reich, Andreas an der Heiden, Maria Rexroth, Ute Hamouda, Osamah Schneider, Julia Veith, Talitha Mühlemann, Barbara Wölfel, Roman Antwerpen, Markus Walter, Mathias Protzer, Ulrike Liebl, Bernhard Haas, Walter Sing, Andreas Drosten, Christian Zapf, Andreas |
author_sort | Böhmer, Merle M |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: In December, 2019, the newly identified severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) emerged in Wuhan, China, causing COVID-19, a respiratory disease presenting with fever, cough, and often pneumonia. WHO has set the strategic objective to interrupt spread of SARS-CoV-2 worldwide. An outbreak in Bavaria, Germany, starting at the end of January, 2020, provided the opportunity to study transmission events, incubation period, and secondary attack rates. METHODS: A case was defined as a person with SARS-CoV-2 infection confirmed by RT-PCR. Case interviews were done to describe timing of onset and nature of symptoms and to identify and classify contacts as high risk (had cumulative face-to-face contact with a confirmed case for ≥15 min, direct contact with secretions or body fluids of a patient with confirmed COVID-19, or, in the case of health-care workers, had worked within 2 m of a patient with confirmed COVID-19 without personal protective equipment) or low risk (all other contacts). High-risk contacts were ordered to stay at home in quarantine for 14 days and were actively followed up and monitored for symptoms, and low-risk contacts were tested upon self-reporting of symptoms. We defined fever and cough as specific symptoms, and defined a prodromal phase as the presence of non-specific symptoms for at least 1 day before the onset of specific symptoms. Whole genome sequencing was used to confirm epidemiological links and clarify transmission events where contact histories were ambiguous; integration with epidemiological data enabled precise reconstruction of exposure events and incubation periods. Secondary attack rates were calculated as the number of cases divided by the number of contacts, using Fisher's exact test for the 95% CIs. FINDINGS: Patient 0 was a Chinese resident who visited Germany for professional reasons. 16 subsequent cases, often with mild and non-specific symptoms, emerged in four transmission generations. Signature mutations in the viral genome occurred upon foundation of generation 2, as well as in one case pertaining to generation 4. The median incubation period was 4·0 days (IQR 2·3–4·3) and the median serial interval was 4·0 days (3·0–5·0). Transmission events were likely to have occurred presymptomatically for one case (possibly five more), at the day of symptom onset for four cases (possibly five more), and the remainder after the day of symptom onset or unknown. One or two cases resulted from contact with a case during the prodromal phase. Secondary attack rates were 75·0% (95% CI 19·0–99·0; three of four people) among members of a household cluster in common isolation, 10·0% (1·2–32·0; two of 20) among household contacts only together until isolation of the patient, and 5·1% (2·6–8·9; 11 of 217) among non-household, high-risk contacts. INTERPRETATION: Although patients in our study presented with predominately mild, non-specific symptoms, infectiousness before or on the day of symptom onset was substantial. Additionally, the incubation period was often very short and false-negative tests occurred. These results suggest that although the outbreak was controlled, successful long-term and global containment of COVID-19 could be difficult to achieve. FUNDING: All authors are employed and all expenses covered by governmental, federal state, or other publicly funded institutions. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-7228725 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2020 |
publisher | Elsevier Ltd. |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-72287252020-05-18 Investigation of a COVID-19 outbreak in Germany resulting from a single travel-associated primary case: a case series Böhmer, Merle M Buchholz, Udo Corman, Victor M Hoch, Martin Katz, Katharina Marosevic, Durdica V Böhm, Stefanie Woudenberg, Tom Ackermann, Nikolaus Konrad, Regina Eberle, Ute Treis, Bianca Dangel, Alexandra Bengs, Katja Fingerle, Volker Berger, Anja Hörmansdorfer, Stefan Ippisch, Siegfried Wicklein, Bernd Grahl, Andreas Pörtner, Kirsten Muller, Nadine Zeitlmann, Nadine Boender, T Sonia Cai, Wei Reich, Andreas an der Heiden, Maria Rexroth, Ute Hamouda, Osamah Schneider, Julia Veith, Talitha Mühlemann, Barbara Wölfel, Roman Antwerpen, Markus Walter, Mathias Protzer, Ulrike Liebl, Bernhard Haas, Walter Sing, Andreas Drosten, Christian Zapf, Andreas Lancet Infect Dis Articles BACKGROUND: In December, 2019, the newly identified severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) emerged in Wuhan, China, causing COVID-19, a respiratory disease presenting with fever, cough, and often pneumonia. WHO has set the strategic objective to interrupt spread of SARS-CoV-2 worldwide. An outbreak in Bavaria, Germany, starting at the end of January, 2020, provided the opportunity to study transmission events, incubation period, and secondary attack rates. METHODS: A case was defined as a person with SARS-CoV-2 infection confirmed by RT-PCR. Case interviews were done to describe timing of onset and nature of symptoms and to identify and classify contacts as high risk (had cumulative face-to-face contact with a confirmed case for ≥15 min, direct contact with secretions or body fluids of a patient with confirmed COVID-19, or, in the case of health-care workers, had worked within 2 m of a patient with confirmed COVID-19 without personal protective equipment) or low risk (all other contacts). High-risk contacts were ordered to stay at home in quarantine for 14 days and were actively followed up and monitored for symptoms, and low-risk contacts were tested upon self-reporting of symptoms. We defined fever and cough as specific symptoms, and defined a prodromal phase as the presence of non-specific symptoms for at least 1 day before the onset of specific symptoms. Whole genome sequencing was used to confirm epidemiological links and clarify transmission events where contact histories were ambiguous; integration with epidemiological data enabled precise reconstruction of exposure events and incubation periods. Secondary attack rates were calculated as the number of cases divided by the number of contacts, using Fisher's exact test for the 95% CIs. FINDINGS: Patient 0 was a Chinese resident who visited Germany for professional reasons. 16 subsequent cases, often with mild and non-specific symptoms, emerged in four transmission generations. Signature mutations in the viral genome occurred upon foundation of generation 2, as well as in one case pertaining to generation 4. The median incubation period was 4·0 days (IQR 2·3–4·3) and the median serial interval was 4·0 days (3·0–5·0). Transmission events were likely to have occurred presymptomatically for one case (possibly five more), at the day of symptom onset for four cases (possibly five more), and the remainder after the day of symptom onset or unknown. One or two cases resulted from contact with a case during the prodromal phase. Secondary attack rates were 75·0% (95% CI 19·0–99·0; three of four people) among members of a household cluster in common isolation, 10·0% (1·2–32·0; two of 20) among household contacts only together until isolation of the patient, and 5·1% (2·6–8·9; 11 of 217) among non-household, high-risk contacts. INTERPRETATION: Although patients in our study presented with predominately mild, non-specific symptoms, infectiousness before or on the day of symptom onset was substantial. Additionally, the incubation period was often very short and false-negative tests occurred. These results suggest that although the outbreak was controlled, successful long-term and global containment of COVID-19 could be difficult to achieve. FUNDING: All authors are employed and all expenses covered by governmental, federal state, or other publicly funded institutions. Elsevier Ltd. 2020-08 2020-05-15 /pmc/articles/PMC7228725/ /pubmed/32422201 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(20)30314-5 Text en © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID-19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on Elsevier Connect, the company's public news and information website. Elsevier hereby grants permission to make all its COVID-19-related research that is available on the COVID-19 resource centre - including this research content - immediately available in PubMed Central and other publicly funded repositories, such as the WHO COVID database with rights for unrestricted research re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for free by Elsevier for as long as the COVID-19 resource centre remains active. |
spellingShingle | Articles Böhmer, Merle M Buchholz, Udo Corman, Victor M Hoch, Martin Katz, Katharina Marosevic, Durdica V Böhm, Stefanie Woudenberg, Tom Ackermann, Nikolaus Konrad, Regina Eberle, Ute Treis, Bianca Dangel, Alexandra Bengs, Katja Fingerle, Volker Berger, Anja Hörmansdorfer, Stefan Ippisch, Siegfried Wicklein, Bernd Grahl, Andreas Pörtner, Kirsten Muller, Nadine Zeitlmann, Nadine Boender, T Sonia Cai, Wei Reich, Andreas an der Heiden, Maria Rexroth, Ute Hamouda, Osamah Schneider, Julia Veith, Talitha Mühlemann, Barbara Wölfel, Roman Antwerpen, Markus Walter, Mathias Protzer, Ulrike Liebl, Bernhard Haas, Walter Sing, Andreas Drosten, Christian Zapf, Andreas Investigation of a COVID-19 outbreak in Germany resulting from a single travel-associated primary case: a case series |
title | Investigation of a COVID-19 outbreak in Germany resulting from a single travel-associated primary case: a case series |
title_full | Investigation of a COVID-19 outbreak in Germany resulting from a single travel-associated primary case: a case series |
title_fullStr | Investigation of a COVID-19 outbreak in Germany resulting from a single travel-associated primary case: a case series |
title_full_unstemmed | Investigation of a COVID-19 outbreak in Germany resulting from a single travel-associated primary case: a case series |
title_short | Investigation of a COVID-19 outbreak in Germany resulting from a single travel-associated primary case: a case series |
title_sort | investigation of a covid-19 outbreak in germany resulting from a single travel-associated primary case: a case series |
topic | Articles |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7228725/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32422201 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(20)30314-5 |
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