Title: Neil Ferguson
1Evidence supporting the use of non-pharmaceutical
interventions in a pandemic
Neil Ferguson MRC Centre for Outbreak Analysis
and ModellingImperial College London
2Timescale of spread
- 2-4 months to peak at source, 1-3 months to
spread to West (in absence of seasonality). - 1/3 of population might become ill, 1 million
new sick people per day at peak. - 15 absenteeism at peak.
- 1st wave over 3 months after 1st UK case.
2
3What can we expect from NPIs?
- Developed world reduce attack rates until
vaccine available. - Developing world reduce attack rates
difficult, since measures dont give
permanent immunity .
The most NPIs can do is eliminate the overshoot
inherent in an unmitigated epidemic.
4Recent reviews
- WHO working group (EID 2006) on National
measures - recommended hand hygiene, and that other measures
considered based on circumstances. - but highlighted the very limited evidence base
for the community impact of most non-pharm.
measures (e.g. avoiding crowding, school closure,
hand hygiene, masks, travel restrictions). - IOM report on reusability of face masks concluded
more research critically needed to evaluate the
effectiveness of face mask use. - IOM report on community mitigation
- The evidence base is scant for use of case
isolation Neither modeling nor historical
analyses provide support for these
interventions. - The evidence suggests a role for community
restrictions ... but does not allow for
differentiating ... specific types of community
restrictions. - ... any discussion of using these interventions
should consider not only their potential health
benefits, but also their likely ethical, social,
economic, and logistical costs.
5Closing the evidence gap
- CDC NPIs studies on seasonal flu 8 projects,
now in 2nd year looking at masks, hand hygiene
etc. - Analysis of historical pandemic and seasonal flu
data. - Surveys of public attitudes to NPIs and what
measures people may take spontaneously (key issue
did people modify behaviour in past
pandemics?). - Other studies.
6Learning from the past 1918
- Very different epidemic patterns seen in
different US cities in fall 1918 (much more
variation than UK). - Timing and nature of public health interventions
varied between US cities. - Can public health interventions provide a
plausible quantitative explanation of the
variation between US cities? - What if? measures hadnt been imposed, or were
imposed earlier - 3 papers recently Bootsma Ferguson PNAS,
Hatchett et al. PNAS, Markel et al., JAMA.
7Trends in mortality
- Both peak and total mortality weakly correlated
with timing of epidemic and previous years
mortality. - Peak mortality strongly correlated with early
interventions. - Peak mortality strongly correlated with presence
of 2 autumn peaks, total mortality weakly so.
8Results of 1918 analysis
- Public health measures explain 1918 pattern well.
- San Francisco, St Louis, Milwaukee and Kansas
City had most effective policies (gt30 drop in
transmission). - But measures often started too late, always
lifted too early. - Also evidence of spontaneous behaviour change.
9A study of the household use of masks
C Raina MacIntyre (1), Simon Cauchemez (2),
Dominic Dwyer (3), Holly Seale (1), Mary Iskander
(1), Pamela Cheung (1), Gary Browne (5), Michael
Fasher (6), Robert Booy (1), Zhanhai Gao (1),
Noemie Ovdin (1), Neil Ferguson(2).
Affiliation's 1. Discipline of Pediatrics
and Child Health, faculty of Medicine, University
of Sydney and National Centre for Immunisation
Research and Surveillance of Vaccine Preventable
Diseases, Childrens Hospital at Westmead, 2.
Imperial College, London, UK 3. Centre for
Infectious Diseases and Microbiology, Westmead
Hospital, Westmead, 5. Emergency Department,
Children's Hospital at Westmead, Westmead, NSW,
6. Wenwest Division of General Practice
10Study design
- Recruitment
- Sydney, winter/spring of 2006 and 2007
- Families of children presenting to the emergency
department and general practice with ILI a temp
of gt37.8 and at least one respiratory symptom. - At least 2 well adults in household.
- Intervention
- Random allocation of the 2 adults to one of three
groups surgical mask, P2 mask, and control
groups. - 1-week follow up
- Incidence of ILI (phone call)
- Adherence to mask use (phone call)
- Nose throat viral swab obtained for PCR testing
for influenza and other respiratory viruses (at
recruitment for index case visit for secondary
cases).
11Outcomes
- Primary outcome presence of ILI or respiratory
virus infection within 1 week of enrollment - Intention to treat analysis.
- Secondary outcome time lag between recruitment
and infection - Important to assess the impact of time-dependent
variables such as adherence - Important to demonstrate a temporal association
between mask use and reduction in the risk of
infection - Multivariate Cox proportional-hazard survival
analysis, with random effects for household
clustering Viboud et al, BMJ, 2004.
12Intention to treat analysis
Control All mask All mask All mask
N() Total100 N() Total186 RR P
ILI 16 (16) 33 (18) 1.11 (0.64-1.91) 0.75
Laboratory confirmed 3 (3) 14 (8) 2.51 (0.74-8.52) 0.19
No significant reduction in incidence due to mask
use
13Compliance
Low - 30 no significant difference between
mask groups.
compliant
Day of mask wearing
14Survival analysis time lag from recruitment to
infection
Hazard Ratio of infection (95 CI) P value
Daily adherence with surgical or P2 mask 0.26 (0.09-0.77) 0.015
Nb adults 1.07 (0.66-1.71) 0.80
Nb siblings 0.86 (0.55-1.35) 0.52
Index lt5 years old 0.88 (0.41-1.89) 0.75
Frailty 0.005
Daily adherence with surgical or P2 mask 0.32 (0.11-0.98) 0.046
Nb adults 1.13 (0.71-1.81) 0.60
Nb siblings 0.80 (0.51-1.27) 0.34
Index lt5 years old 1.02 (0.46-2.24) 0.96
Frailty 0.004
Assumption on incubation period
1-day incubation period
2-day incubation period
15Mask study summary
- No significant impact of mask use on
transmission of respiratory virus during winter
seasonal outbreaks. Low compliance. - Compliant mask use was associated with a
reduction in the hazard ratio of infection. - If compliance is higher in during a severe
pandemic or an emerging disease outbreak, mask
use might reduce the risk of transmission. - Study limitations
- Relatively small population size - underpowered
to detect reductions in incidence smaller than
75 inconclusive comparison of surgical and P2
masks. - Effect needs to be confirmed for the household
context and investigated for other settings. More
trials needed.
16Whats next
Angus Nicoll, ECDC class dismissal/school
closure Ben Schwartz, CDC community mitigation
in the US
17Back up slides
18Recruitment
19Intention to treat
Control Surgical Surgical Surgical P2 P2 P2
N() Tot.100 N() Tot.94 RR P N() Tot.92 RR P
ILI 16 (16) 19 (20) 1.29 0.69-2.31 0.46 14 (15) 0.95 0.49-1.84 gt0.99
Laboratory confirmed 3 (3) 6 (6) 2.13 0.55-8.26 0.32 8 (9) 2.90 0.79-10.60 0.12