Maia has been covering some subsets of the MERS-CoV positive population of the Arabian peninsula of late; particularly to do with healthcare workers (which I also like to cover), those with comorbidities and those with no disease at all (asymptomatics) who are still in some way positive (PCR or antibody) for the MERS-CoV.
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We can see more cases per week (blue line) being reported recently, and this naturally fuels a steep (but linear) climb in the cumulative tally (orange line) of asymptomatic detections. These are largely related to the Jeddah healthcare outbreak.
What's particularly interesting to me is what we see when we look at the proportions of cases each week that are described in the public domain as being asymptomatic.
Thanks again to Maia for a chat about the following definitions. Week #105 of the MERS epidemic contains the 1st case with "Jeddah" i its notes and an illness onset date of 22-Mar. Thus, we define the Jeddah outbreak (for now) as starting in the week beginning 17-Mar. We have seen 13-50% of cases in 5 of those past 7 weeks being described as asymptomatic (grey bars; this week not yet being complete).
Can this information be used to support thoughts that the virus and/or the way it is spreading, has changed?
No.
Why?
Because this jump is not so different from the higher weekly proportions we saw in Sept-2013 and Dec-2013 (well before Jeddah). Oh, and because so far, there is no sign in the 3 complete genomes or 30 partial spike gene sequences that the Jeddah viruses are anything special. In saying that, keep in mind that we don't know how many cases are part of/linked to the "Jeddah outbreak". We do know of 245 distinct viral detections (31 fatal cases) made among humans since 22-Mar and so perhaps 3 genomes is not yet sufficiently representative for us to say there have been no viral changes at all, yet - if we even know what those changes will look like for the MERS-CoV.
As it stands, we are not seeing a disproportionate increase in MERS-CoV-positive people without signs or symptoms of disease. And that is good to know. It would also be good to know if asymptomatic people can shed MERS-CoV. The obvious answer is, no they cannot, because how would the virus get out of them? No coughing or sneezing means no easy way to excrete a respiratory virus. Perhaps there are short periods of signs that just get missed/forgotten/not reported? We do still need to test human urine, faeces, blood and saliva for infectious virus (virus that can be grown, not only identified by detection of its possibly non-replicating or contaminating nucleic acids). But I suspect that is all still a ways down the track.
So, as ever, we keep watching to see what the next few weeks bring to the knowledge base of MERS and the MERS-CoV...as we've been doing for over 110 weeks now.