Early characteristics of the COVID-19 outbreak predict the subsequent epidemic scope
Autor
Zhang, Lei
Tao, Yusha
Wang, Jing
Ong, Jason J.
Tang, Weiming
Zou, Maosheng
Bai, Lu
Ding, Miao
Shen, Mingwang
Zhuang, Guihua
Fairley, Christopher K.
Institución
Resumen
Objectives: The mostly-resolved first wave of the COVID-19 epidemic in China provided a unique
opportunity to investigate how the initial characteristics of the COVID-19 outbreak predictits subsequent
magnitude.
Methods: We collected publicly available COVID-19 epidemiological data from 436 Chinese cities from
16th January–15th March 2020. Based on 45 cities that reported >100 confirmed cases, we examined the
correlation between early-stage epidemic characteristics and subsequent epidemic magnitude.
Results: We identified a transition point from a slow- to a fast-growing phase for COVID-19 at 5.5 (95% CI,
4.6–6.4) days after the first report, and 30 confirmed cases marked a critical threshold for this transition.
The average time for the number of confirmed cases to increase from 30 to 100 (time from 30-to-100) was
6.6 (5.3–7.9) days, and the average case-fatality rate in the first 100 confirmed cases (CFR-100) was 0.8%
(0.2–1.4%). The subsequent epidemic size per million population was significantly associated with both of
these indicators. We predicted a ranking of epidemic size in the cities based on these two indicators and
found it highly correlated with the actual classification of epidemic size.
Conclusions: Early epidemic characteristics are important indicators for the size of the entire epidemic.