International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Feb 2021)

Retrospective study identifies infection related risk factors in close contacts during COVID-19 epidemic

  • Peipei Hu,
  • Mengmeng Ma,
  • Qinlong Jing,
  • Yu Ma,
  • Lin Gan,
  • Yan Chen,
  • Jundi Liu,
  • Dahu Wang,
  • Zhoubin Zhang,
  • Dingmei Zhang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 103
pp. 395 – 401

Abstract

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Objectives: This study aimed to compare the risk of infection of children with that of adults and to explore risk factors of infection with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) by following up close contacts of COVID-19 patients. Method: The retrospective cohort study was performed among close contacts of index cases diagnosed with COVID-19 in Guangzhou, China. Demographic characteristics, clinical symptoms and exposure information were extracted. Logistic regression analysis was employed to explore the risk factors. The restricted cubic spline was conducted to examine to the dose-response relationship between age and SARS-CoV-2 infection. Results: The secondary attack rate (SAR) was 4.4% in 1,344 close contacts. The group of household contacts (17.2%) had the highest SAR. The rare-frequency contact (p < 0.001) and moderate-frequency contact (p < 0.001) were associated with lower risk of infection. Exposure to index cases with dry cough symptoms was associated with infection in close contacts (p = 0.004). Compared with children, adults had a significantly increased risk of infection (p = 0.014). There is a linear positive correlation between age and infection (p = 0.001). Conclusions: Children are probably less susceptible to COVID-19. Close contacts with frequent contact with patients and those exposed to patients with cough symptoms are associated with an increased risk of infection.

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