Impacts of vaccination and asymptomatic testing on SARS-CoV-2 transmission dynamics in a university setting
Abstract
We investigate the impact of vaccination and asymptomatic testing uptake on SARS-CoV-2 transmission in a university student population using a stochastic compartmental model. We find that the magnitude and timing of outbreaks is highly variable depending on the transmissibility of the most dominant strain of SARS CoV-2 and under different vaccine uptake levels and efficacies. When delta is the dominant strain, low level interventions (no asymptomatic testing, 30% vaccinated with a vaccine that is 80% effective at reducing infection) lead to 53-71% of students become infected during the first term. Asymptomatic testing is most useful when vaccine uptake is low: when 30% of students are vaccinated, 90% uptake of asymptomatic testing leads to almost half the case numbers. With high interventions (90% using asymptomatic testing, 90% vaccinated) cumulative incidence is 7-9%, with around 80% of these cases estimated to be asymptomatic. However, under emergence of a new variant that is at least twice as transmissible as delta and with the vaccine efficacy against infection reduced to 55%, large outbreaks are likely in universities, even with very high (90%) uptake of vaccination and 100% uptake of asymptomatic testing. If vaccine efficacy against infection against this new variant is higher (70%), then outbreaks can be mitigated if there is least 50% uptake of asymptomatic testing additional to 90% uptake of vaccination. Our findings suggest that effective vaccination is critical for controlling SARS-CoV-2 transmission in university settings with asymptomatic testing ranging from additionally useful to critical, depending on effectiveness and uptake of vaccination. Other measures may be necessary to control outbreaks under the emergence of a more transmissible variant with vaccine escape.
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