PLoS Computational Biology (Jan 2024)

Estimation of introduction and transmission rates of SARS-CoV-2 in a prospective household study.

  • Michiel van Boven,
  • Christiaan H van Dorp,
  • Ilse Westerhof,
  • Vincent Jaddoe,
  • Valerie Heuvelman,
  • Liesbeth Duijts,
  • Elandri Fourie,
  • Judith Sluiter-Post,
  • Marlies A van Houten,
  • Paul Badoux,
  • Sjoerd Euser,
  • Bjorn Herpers,
  • Dirk Eggink,
  • Marieke de Hoog,
  • Trisja Boom,
  • Joanne Wildenbeest,
  • Louis Bont,
  • Ganna Rozhnova,
  • Marc J Bonten,
  • Mirjam E Kretzschmar,
  • Patricia Bruijning-Verhagen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1011832
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
p. e1011832

Abstract

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Household studies provide an efficient means to study transmission of infectious diseases, enabling estimation of susceptibility and infectivity by person-type. A main inclusion criterion in such studies is usually the presence of an infected person. This precludes estimation of the hazards of pathogen introduction into the household. Here we estimate age- and time-dependent household introduction hazards together with within household transmission rates using data from a prospective household-based study in the Netherlands. A total of 307 households containing 1,209 persons were included from August 2020 until March 2021. Follow-up of households took place between August 2020 and August 2021 with maximal follow-up per household mostly limited to 161 days. Almost 1 out of 5 households (59/307) had evidence of an introduction of SARS-CoV-2. We estimate introduction hazards and within-household transmission rates in our study population with penalized splines and stochastic epidemic models, respectively. The estimated hazard of introduction of SARS-CoV-2 in the households was lower for children (0-12 years) than for adults (relative hazard: 0.62; 95%CrI: 0.34-1.0). Estimated introduction hazards peaked in mid October 2020, mid December 2020, and mid April 2021, preceding peaks in hospital admissions by 1-2 weeks. Best fitting transmission models included increased infectivity of children relative to adults and adolescents, such that the estimated child-to-child transmission probability (0.62; 95%CrI: 0.40-0.81) was considerably higher than the adult-to-adult transmission probability (0.12; 95%CrI: 0.057-0.19). Scenario analyses indicate that vaccination of adults can strongly reduce household infection attack rates and that adding adolescent vaccination offers limited added benefit.