Viruses (Sep 2021)

One Health Investigation of SARS-CoV-2 Infection and Seropositivity among Pets in Households with Confirmed Human COVID-19 Cases—Utah and Wisconsin, 2020

  • Grace W. Goryoka,
  • Caitlin M. Cossaboom,
  • Radhika Gharpure,
  • Patrick Dawson,
  • Cassandra Tansey,
  • John Rossow,
  • Victoria Mrotz,
  • Jane Rooney,
  • Mia Torchetti,
  • Christina M. Loiacono,
  • Mary L. Killian,
  • Melinda Jenkins-Moore,
  • Ailam Lim,
  • Keith Poulsen,
  • Dan Christensen,
  • Emma Sweet,
  • Dallin Peterson,
  • Anna L. Sangster,
  • Erin L. Young,
  • Kelly F. Oakeson,
  • Dean Taylor,
  • Amanda Price,
  • Tair Kiphibane,
  • Rachel Klos,
  • Darlene Konkle,
  • Sanjib Bhattacharyya,
  • Trivikram Dasu,
  • Victoria T. Chu,
  • Nathaniel M. Lewis,
  • Krista Queen,
  • Jing Zhang,
  • Anna Uehara,
  • Elizabeth A. Dietrich,
  • Suxiang Tong,
  • Hannah L. Kirking,
  • Jeffrey B. Doty,
  • Laura S. Murrell,
  • Jessica R. Spengler,
  • Anne Straily,
  • Ryan Wallace,
  • Casey Barton Behravesh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v13091813
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 9
p. 1813

Abstract

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Approximately 67% of U.S. households have pets. Limited data are available on SARS-CoV-2 in pets. We assessed SARS-CoV-2 infection in pets during a COVID-19 household transmission investigation. Pets from households with ≥1 person with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 were eligible for inclusion from April–May 2020. We enrolled 37 dogs and 19 cats from 34 households. All oropharyngeal, nasal, and rectal swabs tested negative by rRT-PCR; one dog’s fur swabs (2%) tested positive by rRT-PCR at the first sampling. Among 47 pets with serological results, eight (17%) pets (four dogs, four cats) from 6/30 (20%) households had detectable SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibodies. In households with a seropositive pet, the proportion of people with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 was greater (median 79%; range: 40–100%) compared to households with no seropositive pet (median 37%; range: 13–100%) (p = 0.01). Thirty-three pets with serologic results had frequent daily contact (≥1 h) with the index patient before the person’s COVID-19 diagnosis. Of these 33 pets, 14 (42%) had decreased contact with the index patient after diagnosis and none were seropositive; of the 19 (58%) pets with continued contact, four (21%) were seropositive. Seropositive pets likely acquired infection after contact with people with COVID-19. People with COVID-19 should restrict contact with pets and other animals.

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