Comparison of the incidence and risk factors of COVID-19 and influenza associated acute respiratory illnesses: Results of the SHIVERS-II, III, IV prospective community cohort study.

Journal: The Journal Of Infectious Diseases
Published:
Abstract

Background: While severe outcomes among hospitalised patients with COVID-19 and influenza are well described, comparative studies on community transmission and milder illnesses associated with COVID-19 and influenza are lacking.

Methods: We compared incidence, risk/protective factors, and clinical features among prospective community cohort participants with PCR-confirmed COVID-19-associated and influenza-associated acute respiratory illnesses (ARI) from 7-February to 2-October 2022 in Wellington, New Zealand.

Results: The crude COVID-19-associated ARI incidence was 59/100 person-years (PY). The adjusted cumulative incidence for COVID-19 [77/100-PY;95%CI,75-80] was 4.5 times higher than for influenza [17/100-PY;95%CI,15-19]. The proportion of children (0-17 years) with COVID-19 of all COVID-19 cases was substantial but smaller than those of influenza [402/1229 (33%) vs 173/255 (68%), p<0.0001]. The highest incidence of COVID-19 was among adolescents (12-17 years) [109/100-PY;95%CI,97-119] and non-Māori/Pacific [83/100-PY;95%CI,80-86] whereas the highest influenza incidence was among children (1-4 years) [49/100-PY;95%CI,40-58] and Māori [35/100-PY;95%CI,28-43].Adolescents (12-17 years) had 2.5 times higher peak COVID-19 incidence (5.9/100) than adults ≥18 years (2.4/100). Adolescents with two doses of the COVID-19 vaccines had 75% greater risk of COVID-19 infection [hazard ratio:1.75,95%CI,1.40-2.20] compared to adults with three doses.Vaccination, age, ethnicity, and household size were independent protective/risk factors for COVID-19 or influenza.Participants with COVID-19, compared with influenza, were less likely to access healthcare or experience febrile/severe illnesses, but more likely to report sore throat, headache, myalgia, and taste/smell loss.

Conclusions: As the world transitions to COVID-19 endemicity, estimating disease burdens in community settings becomes important to understand complete disease pyramids, risk factors and clinical progression for informing countermeasures.

Authors
Q Huang, Tim Wood, Nayyereh Aminisani, Amanda Kvalsvig, Michael Baker, Nhung Nghiem, Ruth Seeds, Tineke Jennings, Lauren Jelley, Chor Tan, Meaghan O'neill, Srushti Utekar, Jemma Geoghegan, David Winter, Nikki Turner, Tony Dowell, Michelle Balm, Cameron Grant, Annette Nesdale, Hazel Dobinson, Karen Daniells, Peter Mcintyre, Marc-alain Widdowson, Paul Thomas, Richard Webby
Relevant Conditions

COVID-19, Acute Pain, Flu, Headache