Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium.
Independent Researcher, Bengaluru, India.
Med Hypotheses. 2021 Jan;146:110431. doi: 10.1016/j.mehy.2020.110431. Epub 2020 Nov 25.
The variation in the speed and intensity of SARS-CoV-2 transmission and severity of the resulting COVID-19 disease are still imperfectly understood. We postulate a dose-response relationship in COVID-19, and that "the dose of virus in the initial inoculum" is an important missing link in understanding several incompletely explained observations in COVID-19 as a factor in transmission dynamics and severity of disease. We hypothesize that: (1) Viral dose in inoculum is related to severity of disease, (2) Severity of disease is related to transmission potential, and (3) In certain contexts, chains of severe cases can build up to severe local outbreaks, and large-scale intensive epidemics. Considerable evidence from other infectious diseases substantiates this hypothesis and recent evidence from COVID-19 points in the same direction. We suggest research avenues to validate the hypothesis. If proven, our hypothesis could strengthen the scientific basis for deciding priority containment measures in various contexts in particular the importance of avoiding super-spreading events and the benefits of mass masking.
SARS-CoV-2 的传播速度和强度以及由此导致的 COVID-19 疾病的严重程度仍然不完全清楚。我们假设 COVID-19 存在剂量反应关系,并且“初始接种物中的病毒剂量”是理解 COVID-19 中几个尚未完全解释的观察结果的重要缺失环节,这些观察结果涉及到传播动力学和疾病严重程度。我们假设:(1)接种物中的病毒剂量与疾病严重程度相关,(2)疾病严重程度与传播潜力相关,(3)在某些情况下,严重病例的链条会导致严重的局部爆发和大规模密集型流行。来自其他传染病的大量证据证实了这一假设,而 COVID-19 的最新证据也指向了相同的方向。我们提出了研究途径来验证这一假设。如果得到证实,我们的假设可以为在不同情况下决定优先控制措施提供更有力的科学依据,特别是避免超级传播事件的重要性和大规模戴口罩的好处。