BMC Infectious Diseases (May 2021)

Lessons learned from the investigation of a COVID-19 cluster in Creil, France: effectiveness of targeting symptomatic cases and conducting contact tracing around them

  • Franck de Laval,
  • Anaïs Grosset-Janin,
  • François Delon,
  • Alexandre Allonneau,
  • Christelle Tong,
  • Flavie Letois,
  • Anne Couderc,
  • Marc-Antoine Sanchez,
  • César Destanque,
  • Fabrice Biot,
  • Françoise Raynaud,
  • Christine Bigaillon,
  • Olivier Ferraris,
  • Etienne Simon-Loriere,
  • Vincent Enouf,
  • Dinaherisoa Andriamanantena,
  • Vincent Pommier de Santi,
  • Emilie Javelle,
  • Audrey Mérens

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-021-06166-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background This study presents the methods and results of the investigation into a SARS-CoV-2 outbreak in a professional community. Due to the limited testing capacity available in France at the time, we elaborated a testing strategy according to pre-test probability. Methods The investigation design combined active case finding and contact tracing around each confirmed case with testing of at-risk contact persons who had any evocative symptoms (n = 88). One month later, we performed serology testing to test and screen symptomatic and asymptomatic cases again (n = 79). Results Twenty-four patients were confirmed (14 with RT-PCR and 10 with serology). The attack rate was 29% (24/83). Median age was 40 (24 to 59), and the sex ratio was 15/12. Only three cases were asymptomatic (= no symptoms at all, 13%, 95% CI, 3–32). Nineteen symptomatic cases (79%, 95% CI, 63–95) presented a respiratory infection, two of which were severe. All the RT-PCR confirmed cases acquired protective antibodies. Median incubation was 4 days (from 1 to 13 days), and the median serial interval was 3 days (0 to 15). We identified pre-symptomatic transmission in 40% of this cluster, but no transmission from asymptomatic to symptomatic cases. Conclusion We report the effective use of targeted testing according to pre-test probability, specifically prioritizing symptomatic COVID-19 diagnosis and contact tracing. The asymptomatic rate raises questions about the real role of asymptomatic infected people in transmission. Conversely, pre-symptomatic contamination occurred frequently in this cluster, highlighting the need to identify, test, and quarantine asymptomatic at-risk contact persons (= contact tracing). The local lockdown imposed helped reduce transmission during the investigation period.

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