Alasdair Munro Profile picture
@NIHRresearch Academic Clinical Lecturer | Paediatric Immunology and Infectious Diseases | Clinical trials | Vaccines | Antibiotics | @apsmunro.bsky.social

Sep 15, 2020, 13 tweets

There has never been more confusion about the role of children in transmission of #SARSCoV2 , and tensions are running high over implications for #schoolsreopening

Time for some clarity

@Damian_Roland and I review ALL the evidence on @DFTBubbles

dontforgetthebubbles.com/the-missing-li…

1/13

When considering transmission risk we must consider 2 classes of factors;

Non-modifiable: The biology of the host and pathogen

Modifiable: Behavioural or environmental influence

Since we can change the latter via policy/guidance etc, we'll focus on the former

2/13

How easily to children catch the virus?

Household contact tracing studies suggest less easily than adults; by about half given the same exposure, based on 4 reviews of all the evidence (links in next tweet)

3/13

There are some suggestions for biases to explain these findings why this might be the case

Some of these are not correct (e.g. "irrelevant because schools closed" or "cases missed because not symptomatic") and none explain the effect size

5/13

Whilst seroprevalence can't tell us about susceptibility (some effects will be due to exposure), most representative studies have found lower rates of seropositivity in children which would support these findings

The findings are more pronounced in young children (<10y)

6/13

What about infectiousness once infected?

This is much harder

We have some indirect evidence from studies of viral loads, suggesting they are broadly similar in children, including those asymptomatic

But we want to know what happens in real life

8/13

2 studies on the same data from South Korea (one adjusting for shared exposure, the other not) seemed to suggest a very low attack rate from infected children, in the setting of extreme infection prevention measures

wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/26…

adc.bmj.com/content/early/…

9/13

A further study from Trento, Italy, seemed to suggest children might be more contagious than adults, but this study has some important biases (covered below)

medrxiv.org/content/10.110…



10/13

What else could contribute to infectiousness?

Well there's some evidence infectiousness is correlated with symptoms, and as ~50% of children may be asymptomatic, this might reduce their contribution to transmission

medrxiv.org/content/10.110…


11/13

What about within schools themselves?

Well, we've covered that too in detail, but see separate thread for studies on school transmission here



12/13

Conclusions
-Children about half as susceptible
-Have roughly same amount of virus
-May be less infectious, ?due to less symptoms
-Lots to learn once schools open

END

Check out the podcast too🎙️

open.spotify.com/show/46C01zzm2…

dontforgetthebubbles.com/podcast/covid-…

dontforgetthebubbles.com/the-missing-li…

13/13

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