Addressing current limitations of household transmission studies by collecting contact data

Publication date

2024-12

Authors

Layan, Maylis
Hens, Niel
de Hoog, Marieke L AISNI 0000000393182386
Bruijning-Verhagen, P. C.J.L.ORCID 0000-0003-4105-9669ISNI 0000000419559955
Cowling, Benjamin J
Cauchemez, Simon

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

cc_by_nc

Abstract

Modeling studies of household transmission data have helped characterize the role of children in influenza and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) epidemics. However, estimates from these studies may be biased since they do not account for the heterogeneous nature of household contacts. Here, we quantified the impact of contact heterogeneity between household members on the estimation of child relative susceptibility and infectivity. We simulated epidemics of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)-like and influenza virus-like infections in a synthetic population of 1000 households, assuming heterogeneous contact levels. Relative contact frequencies were derived from a household contact study according to which contacts are more frequent in the father-mother pair, followed by the child-mother, child-child, and finally child-father pairs. Child susceptibility and infectivity were then estimated while accounting for heterogeneous contacts or not. When ignoring contact heterogeneity, child relative susceptibility was underestimated by approximately 20% in the two disease scenarios. Child relative infectivity was underestimated by 20% when children and adults had different infectivity levels. These results are sensitive to our assumptions of European-style household contact patterns; but they highlight that household studies collecting both disease and contact data are needed to assess the role of complex household contact behavior on disease transmission and improve estimation of key biological parameters.

Keywords

household study, infectivity, modeling, parameter estimation, respiratory infections, simulation, susceptibility, General Medicine, Journal Article

Citation

Layan, M, Hens, N, de Hoog, M L A, Bruijning-Verhagen, P C J L, Cowling, B J & Cauchemez, S 2024, 'Addressing current limitations of household transmission studies by collecting contact data', American Journal of Epidemiology, vol. 193, no. 12, pp. 1832–1839. https://doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwae106