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Secondary attack rates from asymptomatic and symptomatic influenza virus shedders in hospitals: Results from the TransFLUas influenza transmission study

OBJECTIVE: Nosocomial transmission of influenza is a major concern for infection control. We aimed to dissect transmission dynamics of influenza, including asymptomatic transmission events, in acute care. DESIGN: Prospective surveillance study during 2 influenza seasons. SETTING: Tertiary-care hospi...

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Autores principales: Tamò, Raphaël, Turk, Teja, Böni, Jürg, Kouyos, Roger D., Schmutz, Stefan, Huber, Michael, Shah, Cyril, Bischoff-Ferrari, Heike A., Distler, Oliver, Battegay, Edouard, Giovanoli, Pietro, Guckenberger, Matthias, Kohler, Malcolm, Müller, Rouven, Petry, Heidi, Ruschitzka, Frank, McGeer, Allison, Sax, Hugo, Weber, Rainer, Trkola, Alexandra, Kuster, Stefan P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8961411/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33952361
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ice.2021.112
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author Tamò, Raphaël
Turk, Teja
Böni, Jürg
Kouyos, Roger D.
Schmutz, Stefan
Huber, Michael
Shah, Cyril
Bischoff-Ferrari, Heike A.
Distler, Oliver
Battegay, Edouard
Giovanoli, Pietro
Guckenberger, Matthias
Kohler, Malcolm
Müller, Rouven
Petry, Heidi
Ruschitzka, Frank
McGeer, Allison
Sax, Hugo
Weber, Rainer
Trkola, Alexandra
Kuster, Stefan P.
author_facet Tamò, Raphaël
Turk, Teja
Böni, Jürg
Kouyos, Roger D.
Schmutz, Stefan
Huber, Michael
Shah, Cyril
Bischoff-Ferrari, Heike A.
Distler, Oliver
Battegay, Edouard
Giovanoli, Pietro
Guckenberger, Matthias
Kohler, Malcolm
Müller, Rouven
Petry, Heidi
Ruschitzka, Frank
McGeer, Allison
Sax, Hugo
Weber, Rainer
Trkola, Alexandra
Kuster, Stefan P.
author_sort Tamò, Raphaël
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Nosocomial transmission of influenza is a major concern for infection control. We aimed to dissect transmission dynamics of influenza, including asymptomatic transmission events, in acute care. DESIGN: Prospective surveillance study during 2 influenza seasons. SETTING: Tertiary-care hospital. PARTICIPANTS: Volunteer sample of inpatients on medical wards and healthcare workers (HCWs). METHODS: Participants provided daily illness diaries and nasal swabs for influenza A and B detection and whole-genome sequencing for phylogenetic analyses. Contacts between study participants were tracked. Secondary influenza attack rates were calculated based on spatial and temporal proximity and phylogenetic evidence for transmission. RESULTS: In total, 152 HCWs and 542 inpatients were included; 16 HCWs (10.5%) and 19 inpatients (3.5%) tested positive for influenza on 109 study days. Study participants had symptoms of disease on most of the days they tested positive for influenza (83.1% and 91.9% for HCWs and inpatients, respectively). Also, 11(15.5%) of 71 influenza-positive swabs among HCWs and 3 (7.9%) of 38 influenza-positive swabs among inpatients were collected on days without symptoms; 2 (12.5%) of 16 HCWs and 2 (10.5%) of 19 inpatients remained fully asymptomatic. The secondary attack rate was low: we recorded 1 transmission event over 159 contact days (0.6%) that originated from a symptomatic case. No transmission event occurred in 61 monitored days of contacts with asymptomatic influenza-positive individuals. CONCLUSIONS: Influenza in acute care is common, and individuals regularly shed influenza virus without harboring symptoms. Nevertheless, both symptomatic and asymptomatic transmission events proved rare. We suggest that healthcare-associated influenza prevention strategies that are based on preseason vaccination and barrier precautions for symptomatic individuals seem to be effective.
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spelling pubmed-89614112022-04-08 Secondary attack rates from asymptomatic and symptomatic influenza virus shedders in hospitals: Results from the TransFLUas influenza transmission study Tamò, Raphaël Turk, Teja Böni, Jürg Kouyos, Roger D. Schmutz, Stefan Huber, Michael Shah, Cyril Bischoff-Ferrari, Heike A. Distler, Oliver Battegay, Edouard Giovanoli, Pietro Guckenberger, Matthias Kohler, Malcolm Müller, Rouven Petry, Heidi Ruschitzka, Frank McGeer, Allison Sax, Hugo Weber, Rainer Trkola, Alexandra Kuster, Stefan P. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol Original Article OBJECTIVE: Nosocomial transmission of influenza is a major concern for infection control. We aimed to dissect transmission dynamics of influenza, including asymptomatic transmission events, in acute care. DESIGN: Prospective surveillance study during 2 influenza seasons. SETTING: Tertiary-care hospital. PARTICIPANTS: Volunteer sample of inpatients on medical wards and healthcare workers (HCWs). METHODS: Participants provided daily illness diaries and nasal swabs for influenza A and B detection and whole-genome sequencing for phylogenetic analyses. Contacts between study participants were tracked. Secondary influenza attack rates were calculated based on spatial and temporal proximity and phylogenetic evidence for transmission. RESULTS: In total, 152 HCWs and 542 inpatients were included; 16 HCWs (10.5%) and 19 inpatients (3.5%) tested positive for influenza on 109 study days. Study participants had symptoms of disease on most of the days they tested positive for influenza (83.1% and 91.9% for HCWs and inpatients, respectively). Also, 11(15.5%) of 71 influenza-positive swabs among HCWs and 3 (7.9%) of 38 influenza-positive swabs among inpatients were collected on days without symptoms; 2 (12.5%) of 16 HCWs and 2 (10.5%) of 19 inpatients remained fully asymptomatic. The secondary attack rate was low: we recorded 1 transmission event over 159 contact days (0.6%) that originated from a symptomatic case. No transmission event occurred in 61 monitored days of contacts with asymptomatic influenza-positive individuals. CONCLUSIONS: Influenza in acute care is common, and individuals regularly shed influenza virus without harboring symptoms. Nevertheless, both symptomatic and asymptomatic transmission events proved rare. We suggest that healthcare-associated influenza prevention strategies that are based on preseason vaccination and barrier precautions for symptomatic individuals seem to be effective. Cambridge University Press 2022-03 2021-05-06 /pmc/articles/PMC8961411/ /pubmed/33952361 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ice.2021.112 Text en © The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Tamò, Raphaël
Turk, Teja
Böni, Jürg
Kouyos, Roger D.
Schmutz, Stefan
Huber, Michael
Shah, Cyril
Bischoff-Ferrari, Heike A.
Distler, Oliver
Battegay, Edouard
Giovanoli, Pietro
Guckenberger, Matthias
Kohler, Malcolm
Müller, Rouven
Petry, Heidi
Ruschitzka, Frank
McGeer, Allison
Sax, Hugo
Weber, Rainer
Trkola, Alexandra
Kuster, Stefan P.
Secondary attack rates from asymptomatic and symptomatic influenza virus shedders in hospitals: Results from the TransFLUas influenza transmission study
title Secondary attack rates from asymptomatic and symptomatic influenza virus shedders in hospitals: Results from the TransFLUas influenza transmission study
title_full Secondary attack rates from asymptomatic and symptomatic influenza virus shedders in hospitals: Results from the TransFLUas influenza transmission study
title_fullStr Secondary attack rates from asymptomatic and symptomatic influenza virus shedders in hospitals: Results from the TransFLUas influenza transmission study
title_full_unstemmed Secondary attack rates from asymptomatic and symptomatic influenza virus shedders in hospitals: Results from the TransFLUas influenza transmission study
title_short Secondary attack rates from asymptomatic and symptomatic influenza virus shedders in hospitals: Results from the TransFLUas influenza transmission study
title_sort secondary attack rates from asymptomatic and symptomatic influenza virus shedders in hospitals: results from the transfluas influenza transmission study
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8961411/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33952361
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ice.2021.112
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