The researchers wanted to know if a period of 14 days was really long enough for the virus to stop being detectable, concluding that it was not.
Washington:
Some people infected with SARS-CoV-2 may be able to transmit the virus for longer than the recommended quarantine period, without necessarily manifesting any symptoms during the final stage of the infection, a study suggests.
The research, published recently in the journalFrontiers in Medicine, involved 38 Brazilian patients who were followed on a weekly basis between April and November 2020.
The researchers affiliated with the Pasteur-USP Scientific Platform, a partnership between France's Pasteur Institute, the University of Sao Paulo (USP) and Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz) in Brazil, followed the patients until they tested negative twice or three times consecutively by RT-qPCR.
They found that it took a month on average for the diagnostic test to become negative.
"Of the 38 cases we tracked, two men and a woman were atypical in the sense that the virus was continuously detected in their organism for more than 70 days," said Marielton dos Passos Cunha, first author of the research.
"Based on this result, we can say that about 8 per cent of people infected by SARS-CoV-2 may be able to transmit the virus for more than two months, without necessarily manifesting any symptoms during the final stage of the infection," Passos Cunha said.
The researchers wanted to know if a period of 14 days was really long enough for the virus to stop being detectable, concluding that it was not.
"It can take a month for a patient to test negative, and in some cases included in our study the patients remained positive for 71 to 232 days," said Paola Minoprio, one of the coordinators of the Platform and principal investigator for the study.
The finding serves as an alert regarding the risk of limiting quarantine for COVID-19 patients to seven, ten or even 14 days after they test positive, as initially prescribed by protocols to combat the disease, the researchers said.
It also reinforces the significance of vaccination, social distancing, and mask wearing, they said.