Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Breakout Group: Best Methods for Studying Contact Transmission November 4, 2010 and November 5, 2010 – Atlanta, GA “Understanding the Modes of Influenza Transmission” Workshop
2
What are the key questions/ gaps remaining in understanding the contribution of contact transmission to the spread of influenza among humans?
3
Contact Transmission Breakout Group: Remaining Key Questions/ Gaps Methodological issues PCR identification and quantification VERSUS culture viability VERSUS human infectivity Lack of evidence for contribution of contact transmission on human influenza: Infectious dose Effect of underlying immunity Survival on various surfaces, especially hands Role of eyes, lips, nose, mouth exposure Environmental microbiology of influenza Level of contamination of various surfaces Significance of heavily contaminated environments Contribution of humidity, temperature, uv, matrix, to survival
4
What are the best study designs and their pro’s/ con’s? What study designs would be best for understanding the contribution of contact transmission to the other transmission routes?
5
Contact Transmission Breakout Group: Best Study Design and pro’s/ con’s Survival of virus on surfaces, especially hands as a function of temperature, humidity, matrix, uv. Pros: Basic environmental microbiology needed to inform human studies Cons: Does not prove role in contact transmission in humans Human inoculation experiments, focusing on roles of lips, eyes, nose, mouth as entry portals Pros: Address major gaps Cons: Not demonstrate role in natural infection. Ethical concerns. Confounded by differences in strain, concentration, matrix. Expensive. Suggestion: Do first in ferrets, especially eye inoculation.
6
Contact Transmission Breakout Group: Best Study Design and pro’s/ con’s Determine environmental burden of influenza – laboratory & field studies Pros: Inform human studies and models Cons: Does not prove contact transmission Human challenge studies: Pros: Can selectively block different modes of transmission; human infections, can study interventions; able to control for confounders better than field studies Cons: Expensive, ethical issues, limited virus strains, not natural infections Suggestion: Use naturally infected donors, but logistically very problematic
7
Contact Transmission Breakout Group: Best Study Design and pro’s/ con’s Hand washing studies: Pros: Best way of investigating value of intervention Cons: Does not effectively address role of contact transmission. Lots of confounders. Lots of conflicting results. Lack of positive result does not discard contact transmission.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.