人类偏肺病毒和季节性冠状病毒的家庭传播。

IF 2.5 4区 医学 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Cristalyne Bell, Cecilia He, Derek Norton, Maureen Goss, Guanhua Chen, Jonathan Temte
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们分析了威斯康星州中南部一项基于社区的急性呼吸道疾病研究的数据,该研究涉及 K-12 学生及其家庭,评估了两种常见季节性呼吸道病毒--人类偏肺病毒 (HMPV) 和人类冠状病毒 OC43 和 HKU1 (HCOV)--的家庭传播情况。我们发现,HMPV 和 HCOV 的二次感染率分别为 12.2%(95% CI:8.1%-17.4%)和 19.2%(95% CI:13.8%-25.7%)。我们建立了个人和家庭水平的回归模型,发现 HMPV 传播与指数病例的年龄呈正相关(个人模型:p = .016;家庭模型:p = .004),HCOV 传播与家庭密度呈正相关(家庭模型:p = .048)。我们还发现,非指数病例的年龄与 HMPV(个人模型:p = .049)和 HCOV(个人模型:p = .041)的传播呈负相关,但我们将其归因于原始研究设计中的选择偏差。了解常见呼吸道病毒(如 HMPV 和 HCOV)的家庭传播可能有助于拓宽我们对总体疾病负担的了解,并建立防止疾病从低风险人群向高风险人群传播的方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Household transmission of human metapneumovirus and seasonal coronavirus.

We analyzed data from a community-based acute respiratory illness study involving K-12 students and their families in southcentral Wisconsin and assessed household transmission of two common seasonal respiratory viruses - human metapneumovirus (HMPV) and human coronaviruses OC43 and HKU1 (HCOV). We found secondary infection rates of 12.2% (95% CI: 8.1%-17.4%) and 19.2% (95% CI: 13.8%-25.7%) for HMPV and HCOV, respectively. We performed individual- and family-level regression models and found that HMPV transmission was positively associated age of the index case (individual model: p = .016; family model: p = .004) and HCOV transmission was positively associated with household density (family model: p = .048). We also found that the age of the non-index case was negatively associated with transmission of both HMPV (individual model: p = .049) and HCOV (individual model: p = .041), but we attributed this to selection bias from the original study design. Understanding household transmission of common respiratory viruses like HMPV and HCOV may help to broaden our understanding of the overall disease burden and establish methods to prevent the spread of disease from low- to high-risk populations.

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来源期刊
Epidemiology and Infection
Epidemiology and Infection 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
2.40%
发文量
366
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Epidemiology & Infection publishes original reports and reviews on all aspects of infection in humans and animals. Particular emphasis is given to the epidemiology, prevention and control of infectious diseases. The scope covers the zoonoses, outbreaks, food hygiene, vaccine studies, statistics and the clinical, social and public-health aspects of infectious disease, as well as some tropical infections. It has become the key international periodical in which to find the latest reports on recently discovered infections and new technology. For those concerned with policy and planning for the control of infections, the papers on mathematical modelling of epidemics caused by historical, current and emergent infections are of particular value.
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