Duration of viable SARS-CoV-2 shedding from respiratory tract in different human hosts and its impact on isolation discontinuation polices revision; a narrative review

•Confirmation of virus replication and infectivity requires viral culture, which is not practical in acute settings as the virus requires prolonged time to be isolated and specific laboratory settings with biosafety levels of 3 or more.•This systematic review provides data on the understanding of SA...

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Published inClinical infection in practice Vol. 13; p. 100140
Main Authors Qutub, Mohammed, Aldabbagh, Yasser, Mehdawi, Fahtima, Alraddadi, Abdullah, Alhomsy, Mohanna, Alnahdi, Abdulaziz, Fakeeh, Majed, Maghrabi, Abdullah, Alwagdani, Meshari, Bahabri, Nezar
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier Ltd 01.01.2022
The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of British Infection Association
Elsevier
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Summary:•Confirmation of virus replication and infectivity requires viral culture, which is not practical in acute settings as the virus requires prolonged time to be isolated and specific laboratory settings with biosafety levels of 3 or more.•This systematic review provides data on the understanding of SARS-CoV-2 infectivity. The findings show that 95% of samples are no longer viable after day 15 in general population, with median of 11 days, and with a mean of 28.75 days.•When applying this review on critical patient and immunocompromised individuals, the viable viral shedding could be lasted up to 2 and 4 months, respectively, with median of 20 days.•According to available evidence; infection prevention and control guidelines may take into account that CTv equal or above 35 may be safely discharged and no longer require isolation.•This review indicates for certain that repeat testing SARS-CoV-2 viral RNA in patients has no importance in determining infectivity. a combination of molecular and rapid antigen testing with incorporation of patient’s host factors, disease symptomatology and severity might guide the clinical decision in discontinuation of isolation. The duration of viable viral shedding is important to be defined in regards of viral transmission in SARS-CoV-2 infection with the backdrop of the current worldwide effort for revising isolation polices and establishing the duration of infectiousness. In this review we searched databases including Medline and google scholar for research articles published between January 2020 and January 2022. We included case reports, case series, cross sectional, cohort, and randomized control trials that reported the duration of shedding of viable SARS-CoV-2 virus. After evaluating the criteria for inclusion, 32 articles (2721 patients) were included. This review showed that the median for the last day of successful viral isolation was 11 (8.5–14.5 95% CI) , 20 (9.0–57.5 95 %CI), 20 (9.0–103 95 %CI) for the general population, critical patients and immunocompromised individuals, respectively, with significant association between prolonged viral shedding, disease severity (P-Value 0.024) and immunosuppressive status (P-Value 0.023). The corresponding higher cutoff of CTv to culturable virus ranged between 26.25 and 34.00 (95% confidence interval) with median of 30.5, and higher values were observed when critical (25.0–37.37 95 %CI) and immunocompromised patients (20.0–37.82 95 %CI) have been excluded, this deviation did not represent a statistical significance (P-Value 0.997 and 0.888) respectively. Our review highlights that repeating SARS-CoV-2 viral RNA test solely in recovering patients has no importance in determining infectivity and emphasizes the individualization of de-isolation decisions based on the host factors and a combined symptom and testing-based approaches with the later benefiting most of correlation with recently introduced rapid antigen test. Our finding in the review also opposes the most recent CDC Guidance on shortening isolation duration in term of the last days of viable transmissible virus, therefore caution should be considered when revising such protocols.
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Adult Infectious Diseases division, Department of Medicine, King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center, Jeddah- Saudi Arabia / Adult Infectious Diseases division, Department of Medicine, Al-Moosa Specialist Hospital, Al-Ahsa, Saudi Arabia.
Contributed equally to the final manuscript.
ISSN:2590-1702
2590-1702
DOI:10.1016/j.clinpr.2022.100140