Katherine Gallagher

and 18 more

Background We estimated the secondary attack rate of SARS-CoV-2 among household contacts of PCR-confirmed cases of COVID-19 in rural Kenya and analysed risk factors for transmission. Methods We enrolled incident PCR-confirmed cases and their household members. At baseline, a questionnaire, a blood sample, and naso-oropharyngeal swabs were collected. Household members were followed 4, 7, 10, 14, 21 and 28 days after the date of the first PCR-positive in the household; naso-oropharyngeal swabs were collected at each visit and used to define secondary cases. Blood samples were collected every 1-2 weeks. Symptoms were collected in a daily symptom diary. We used binomial regression to estimate secondary attack rates and survival analysis to analyze risk factors for transmission. Results A total of 119 households with at least one positive household member were enrolled between October 2020 and September 2022, comprising 503 household members; 226 remained in follow up at day-14 (45%). A total of 43 secondary cases arose within 14 days of identification of the primary case, 81 household members remained negative. The 7-day secondary attack rate was 4% (95%CI 1-10%), the 14-day secondary attack rate was 28% (95%CI 17-40%). Of 38 secondary cases with data, 8 reported symptoms (21%, 95%CI 8-34%). Antibody to SARS-CoV-2 spike protein at enrolment was not associated with risk of becoming a secondary case. Conclusion Households in our setting experienced a lower 7-day attack rate than a recent meta-analysis indicated as the global average (23-43% depending on variant), and infection is mostly asymptomatic in our setting.

JULIA WANGUI

and 6 more

Background: Human respiratory syncytial virus (HRSV) is a major cause of severe viral acute respiratory illness and contributes significantly to severe pneumonia cases in Africa. Little is known about its spatial-temporal distribution as defined by its genetic diversity. Methods: A retrospective study conducted utilizing archived nasopharyngeal specimens from patients attending outpatient clinics in hospitals located in five demographically and climatically distinct regions of Kenya; Coast, Western, Highlands, Eastern and Nairobi. The viral total RNA was extracted and tested using multiplex real time RT-PCR (reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction). A segment of the G-gene was amplified using one-step RT-PCR and sequenced by Sanger di-deoxy method. Bayesian analysis of phylogeny was utilized and subsequently median joining methods for haplotype network reconstruction. Results: Three genotypes of HRSVA were detected; GA5 (14.0%), GA2 (33.1%) and NA1 (52.9%). HRSVA prevalence varied by location from 33% to 13.2% in the Highlands and the Eastern regions respectively. The mean nucleotide diversity (Pi(π)) varied by genotype: highest of 0.018 for GA5 and lowest of 0.005 for NA1. A total of 58 haplotypes were identified (GA5 10; GA2 20; NA1 28). These haplotypes were introduced into the population locally by single haplotypes and additional subsidiary seeds amongst the GA2 and the NA1 haplotypes. Conclusions: HRSVA was found across all the regions throughout the study period and comprised three genotypes; GA5, GA2 and NA1 genotypes. The genotypes were disproportionately distributed across the regions with GA5 gradually increasing towards the Western zones and decreasing towards the Eastern zones of the country.