Abstract

The importance of surveillance testing and quarantine on university campuses to limit SARS-CoV-2 transmission needs to be reevaluated in the context of a complex and rapidly changing environment that includes vaccines, variants, and waning immunity. Also, recent US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines suggest that vaccinated students do not need to participate in surveillance testing. To evaluate the use of surveillance testing and quarantine in a fully vaccinated student population for whom vaccine effectiveness may be affected by the type of vaccination, presence of variants, and loss of vaccine-induced or natural immunity over time. In this simulation study, an agent-based Susceptible, Exposed, Infected, Recovered model was developed with some parameters estimated using data from the 2020 to 2021 academic year at Duke University (Durham, North Carolina) that described a simulated population of 5000 undergraduate students residing on campus in residential dormitories. This study assumed that 100% of residential undergraduates are vaccinated. Under varying levels of vaccine effectiveness (90%, 75%, and 50%), the reductions in the numbers of positive cases under various mitigation strategies that involved surveillance testing and quarantine were estimated. The percentage of students infected with SARS-CoV-2 each day for the course of the semester (100 days) and the total number of isolated or quarantined students were estimated. A total of 5000 undergraduates were simulated in the study. In simulations with 90% vaccine effectiveness, weekly surveillance testing was associated with only marginally reduced viral transmission. At 50% to 75% effectiveness, surveillance testing was estimated to reduce the number of infections by as much as 93.6%. A 10-day quarantine protocol for exposures was associated with only modest reduction in infections until vaccine effectiveness dropped to 50%. Increased testing of reported contacts was estimated to be at least as effective as quarantine at limiting infections. In this simulated modeling study of infection dynamics on a college campus where 100% of the student body is vaccinated, weekly surveillance testing was associated with a substantial reduction of campus infections with even a modest loss of vaccine effectiveness. Model simulations also suggested that an increased testing cadence can be as effective as a 10-day quarantine period at limiting infections. Together, these findings provide a potential foundation for universities to design appropriate mitigation protocols for the 2021 to 2022 academic year.

Highlights

  • Surveillance testing and quarantine were 2 approaches used successfully by universities to limit the spread of SARS-CoV-2 during the 2020 to 2021 academic year.[1]

  • A 10-day quarantine protocol for exposures was associated with only modest reduction in infections until vaccine effectiveness dropped to 50%

  • Increased testing of reported contacts was estimated to be at least as effective as quarantine at limiting infections. In this simulated modeling study of infection dynamics on a college campus where 100% of the student body is vaccinated, weekly surveillance testing was associated with a substantial reduction of campus infections with even a modest loss of vaccine effectiveness

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Summary

Introduction

Surveillance testing and quarantine were 2 approaches used successfully by universities to limit the spread of SARS-CoV-2 during the 2020 to 2021 academic year.[1]. The BioNTech 162b2 and messenger RNA-1273 vaccines exhibit approximately 90% effectiveness against infection,[2,3,4] and the Ad26.COV2.S vaccine is approximately 66% effective.[5] some genetic variants of SARSCoV-2 (eg, B.1.351 [β] and P1 [γ]) appear to have some resistance to vaccine-induced neutralizing antibodies.[6,7,8,9] it is possible that the effectiveness of vaccines may be further eroded by the presence of known and future viral variants.[10] the durability of vaccine-induced immunity is still unknown, and immunity may wane over time.[11,12] These factors are likely to contribute to an uncertain and continually changing environment of immunity In such an environment, it is conceivable that surveillance testing and quarantine might remain important COVID-19 mitigation strategies on college campuses, in contrast to recent US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines.[13]

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