Surgical Mask Partition Reduces the Risk of Noncontact Transmission in a Golden Syrian Hamster Model for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)

Jasper Fuk‐Woo Chan(Queen Mary Hospital), Shuofeng Yuan(University of Hong Kong), Jinxia Zhang(University of Hong Kong), Vincent Kwok‐Man Poon(University of Hong Kong), Chris Chung‐Sing Chan(University of Hong Kong), Andrew Chak-Yiu Lee(University of Hong Kong), Zhimeng Fan(University of Hong Kong), Can Li(University of Hong Kong), Ronghui Liang(University of Hong Kong), Jianli Cao(University of Hong Kong), Kaiming Tang(University of Hong Kong), Cuiting Luo(University of Hong Kong), Vincent Chi‐Chung Cheng(Queen Mary Hospital), Jian‐Piao Cai(University of Hong Kong), Hin Chu(University of Hong Kong), Kwok‐Hung Chan(University of Hong Kong), Kelvin Kai‐Wang To(Queen Mary Hospital), Siddharth Sridhar(Queen Mary Hospital), Kwok‐Yung Yuen(Queen Mary Hospital)
Clinical Infectious Diseases
May 28, 2020
Cited by 557Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is believed to be mostly transmitted by medium- to large-sized respiratory droplets, although airborne transmission may be possible in healthcare settings involving aerosol-generating procedures. Exposure to respiratory droplets can theoretically be reduced by surgical mask usage. However, there is a lack of experimental evidence supporting surgical mask usage for prevention of COVID-19. METHODS: We used a well-established golden Syrian hamster SARS-CoV-2 model. We placed SARS-CoV-2-challenged index hamsters and naive hamsters into closed system units each comprising 2 different cages separated by a polyvinyl chloride air porous partition with unidirectional airflow within the isolator. The effect of a surgical mask partition placed between the cages was investigated. Besides clinical scoring, hamster specimens were tested for viral load, histopathology, and viral nucleocapsid antigen expression. RESULTS: Noncontact transmission was found in 66.7% (10/15) of exposed naive hamsters. Surgical mask partition for challenged index or naive hamsters significantly reduced transmission to 25% (6/24, P = .018). Surgical mask partition for challenged index hamsters significantly reduced transmission to only 16.7% (2/12, P = .019) of exposed naive hamsters. Unlike the severe manifestations of challenged hamsters, infected naive hamsters had lower clinical scores, milder histopathological changes, and lower viral nucleocapsid antigen expression in respiratory tract tissues. CONCLUSIONS: SARS-CoV-2 could be transmitted by respiratory droplets or airborne droplet nuclei which could be reduced by surgical mask partition in the hamster model. This is the first in vivo experimental evidence to support the possible benefit of surgical mask in prevention of COVID-19 transmission, especially when masks were worn by infected individuals.


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