评估COVID-19感染致死率的年龄特异性:系统评价、荟萃分析和公共政策影响

Andrew T. Levin, W. Hanage, Nana Owusu-Boaitey, Kensington B. Cochran, Seamus P. Walsh, G. Meyerowitz-katz
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引用次数: 13

摘要

本文评估了COVID-19感染病死率(IFR)的年龄特异性。我们的基准荟萃回归综合了最近在比利时、日内瓦、印第安纳、纽约、西班牙和瑞典进行的六项大规模血清患病率研究的年龄特异性ifr。估计的IFR在儿童和年轻人中接近于零,但随着年龄的增长呈指数增长,50-59岁约为0.3%,60-69岁为1.3%,70-79岁为4.6%,80岁及以上为25%。我们将这些预测与最近美国其他9个地区、3项小规模研究和3个国家(冰岛、新西兰和韩国)的血清患病率估计所暗示的年龄特异性ifr进行了比较,这些国家都参与了COVID-19感染的全面跟踪和追踪。我们还回顾了其他32个地区的血清患病率研究,这些研究的设计不太适合估计年龄特异性ifr。我们的研究结果表明,COVID-19不仅对老年人和体弱者很危险,而且对健康的中年人也很危险,对他们来说,死亡率是车祸死亡风险的50倍以上。因此,给定地点的总体IFR与特定年龄的感染模式具有内在联系。在美国感染率达到20%的情况下,我们的分析表明,保护弱势群体可以防止20多万人死亡。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Assessing the Age Specificity of Infection Fatality Rates for COVID-19: Systematic Review, Meta-analysis, & Public Policy Implications
This paper assesses the age specificity of the infection fatality rate (IFR) for COVID-19. Our benchmark meta-regression synthesizes the age-specific IFRs from six recent large-scale seroprevalence studies conducted in Belgium, Geneva, Indiana, New York, Spain, and Sweden. The estimated IFR is close to zero for children and younger adults but rises exponentially with age, reaching about 0.3 percent for ages 50-59, 1.3 percent for ages 60-69, 4.6 percent for ages 70-79, and 25 percent for ages 80 and above. We compare those predictions to the age-specific IFRs implied by recent seroprevalence estimates for nine other U.S. locations, three smale-scale studies, and three countries (Iceland, New Zealand, and Republic of Korea) that have engaged in comprehensive tracking and tracing of COVID-19 infections. We also review seroprevalence studies of 32 other locations whose design was not well-suited for estimating age-specific IFRs. Our findings indicate that COVID-19 is not just dangerous for the elderly and infirm but also for healthy middle-aged adults, for whom the fatality rate is more than 50 times greater than the risk of dying in an automobile accident. Consequently, the overall IFR for a given location is intrinsically linked to the age-specific pattern of infections. In a scenario where the U.S. infection rate reaches 20 percent, our analysis indicates that protecting vulnerable age groups could prevent more than 200,000 deaths.
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