Covid-19 Infection Fatality Ratio Is About 1%, Says Report

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The Covid-19 infection fatality ratio is around 1% in high-income countries, but substantially lower in low-income countries with younger populations.

These are the findings of a new report from the Imperial College London Covid-19 Response Team.

The report reveals that:

The infection fatality ratio (IFR) is a key statistic for estimating the burden of Covid-19 and has been continuously debated throughout the current pandemic.

This ratio represents the proportion of deaths among all infected individuals. This report covers a screening of 175 studies and identified 10 antibody surveys to obtain updated estimates of the IFR using a modeling framework.

This specific framework addresses several limitations of previous estimates which have relied on data early in the epidemic, and have not fully accounted for uncertainty in serological (antibody) test characteristics, and delays from onset of infection to seroconversion (specific antibody becoming detectable in the blood), death, and antibody waning.

The researchers found that age-specific IFRs follow a pattern, with the risk of death doubling approximately every eight years of age.

Age-specific IFRs increased from 0.1% and below for individuals under 40 years to greater than 5% among individuals over 80 years

Using these age-specific estimates, the team estimates the overall IFR in a low-income country, with a population structure skewed towards younger individuals, can be expected to be approximately 0.23% (95% prediction interval 0.14-0.42).

In contrast, in high-income countries, with a greater concentration of elderly individuals, the report estimates that the overall IFR can be expected to be approximately 1.15% (95% prediction interval 0.78-1.79).

In addition, the report takes seroreversion into account. Seroreversion is the waning of antibodies, leading to a negative serological result in people who were previously infected with coronavirus and would have tested positive at an earlier time.

New treatments for Covid-19

Researchers explain that it will be important to continue to monitor the IFR as new treatments are introduced and population immunity increases.

The study did not find a large effect of the possible waning of antibodies on our IFR estimates at the times the serosurveys were done, but it will become increasingly important to account for potential declines in antibody levels to avoid overestimating the IFR in the future.

In addition, the researchers did not find evidence that the IFR was higher in regions with larger epidemics.

The work is presented in the latest report from the WHO Collaborating Center for Infectious Disease Modeling within the MRC Center for Global Infectious Disease Analysis, Jameel Institute (J-IDEA), Imperial College London.

Since the emergence of the new coronavirus (COVID-19) in December 2019, the Imperial College Covid-19 Response Team has adopted a policy of immediately sharing research findings on the developing pandemic.

Covid-19 has a high fatality rate

Dr. Lucy Okell, a co-author of the study from Imperial College London, said: “Although, the elderly are by more at the risk of dying due to Covid-19, the risk in middle age is still high. For example, we estimate that around one in 260 people aged 50-55 years die if infected. We calculated Covid-19 fatality largely based on the first wave of the epidemic in a number of countries and we hope and expect to see some reduction in fatality now due to new clinical knowledge and treatment, but this remains a dangerous virus.”

Dr. Nicholas Brazeau, co-author of the study from Imperial College London, said: “Estimates of the IFR are difficult, given the many biases of data collected during an outbreak. Using a statistical model, we partly reconcile these biases and help to explain country-specific differences. Overall, we suggest that age differences will have the largest effects, as regions that were hit hardest by the pandemic did not necessarily have higher IFRs.”

Dr. Robert Verity, a co-author of the study from Imperial College London, said: “We know that antibody tests are not perfect, and there may be a considerable number of people who do not mount a detectable antibody response to SARS-CoV-2. However, even when this uncertainty is taken into account, we still find that Covid-19 has a high fatality rate—on the order of 1% for a typical high-income country. This risk is concentrated in older ages, with the probability of dying from Covid-19 doubling approximately every eight years.”

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