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. 2003 May 24;361(9371):1761-6.
doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(03)13410-1.

Epidemiological determinants of spread of causal agent of severe acute respiratory syndrome in Hong Kong

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Epidemiological determinants of spread of causal agent of severe acute respiratory syndrome in Hong Kong

Christl A Donnelly et al. Lancet. .

Erratum in

  • Lancet. 2003 May 24;361(9371):1832

Abstract

Background: Health authorities worldwide, especially in the Asia Pacific region, are seeking effective public-health interventions in the continuing epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). We assessed the epidemiology of SARS in Hong Kong.

Methods: We included 1425 cases reported up to April 28, 2003. An integrated database was constructed from several sources containing information on epidemiological, demographic, and clinical variables. We estimated the key epidemiological distributions: infection to onset, onset to admission, admission to death, and admission to discharge. We measured associations between the estimated case fatality rate and patients' age and the time from onset to admission.

Findings: After the initial phase of exponential growth, the rate of confirmed cases fell to less than 20 per day by April 28. Public-health interventions included encouragement to report to hospital rapidly after the onset of clinical symptoms, contact tracing for confirmed and suspected cases, and quarantining, monitoring, and restricting the travel of contacts. The mean incubation period of the disease is estimated to be 6.4 days (95% CI 5.2-7.7). The mean time from onset of clinical symptoms to admission to hospital varied between 3 and 5 days, with longer times earlier in the epidemic. The estimated case fatality rate was 13.2% (9.8-16.8) for patients younger than 60 years and 43.3% (35.2-52.4) for patients aged 60 years or older assuming a parametric gamma distribution. A non-parametric method yielded estimates of 6.8% (4.0-9.6) and 55.0% (45.3-64.7), respectively. Case clusters have played an important part in the course of the epidemic.

Interpretation: Patients' age was strongly associated with outcome. The time between onset of symptoms and admission to hospital did not alter outcome, but shorter intervals will be important to the wider population by restricting the infectious period before patients are placed in quarantine.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Epidemiological description of SARS epidemic in Hong Kong A: Temporal pattern of SARS epidemic in Hong Kong by cluster of infection. B: Spatial distribution of population of Hong Kong and district-specific incidence (per 10 000 population) over course of epidemic to date. C: Age distribution of residents of Hong Kong and age-specific incidence (per 10 000 population) over course of epidemic to date. D: Detail of temporal pattern for Amoy Gardens cluster, according to day of admission, and fitted γ distribution.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Maximum likelihood estimates A: Infection-to-onset distribution. B: Time-dependent onset-to-admission distribution as a function of time of onset of clinical symptoms. C: Admission-to-death distribution by patients’age. D: Admission-to-discharge distribution by patients’age. E: Observed and maximum likelihood estimated onset-to-admission intervals in presence of censoring.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Non-parametric and maximum-likelihood γ probabilities of survival and discharge

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