| Return Create A Forum - Home | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| nCoV_info | |
| https://ncovinfo.createaforum.com | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| Return to: nCoV - discussion | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| #Post#: 36-------------------------------------------------- | |
| estimating the cfr | |
| By: gsgs Date: February 1, 2020, 1:40 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| currently we have 2.2% = deaths/confirmed cases. | |
| That would make ~1mllion deaths in USA within 1 year (when the | |
| vaccine may become available) | |
| Assuming the spread is as in 2009 | |
| ---------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| -- | |
| On February 12, 2010, the CDC released updated estimate figures | |
| for swine flu, | |
| reporting that, in total, 57 million Americans had been | |
| sickened, 257,000 had been | |
| hospitalised and 11,690 people had died (including 1,180 | |
| children) due to swine flu | |
| from April through to mid-January.[128] | |
| ========================================== | |
| but ... | |
| I should really add here, that they have apparently many cases | |
| which are unconfirmed, | |
| but less likely deaths that are unnoticed. | |
| There were estimates about 100000 cases already. | |
| These would probably still have developed immunity. | |
| Then the CFR would be only ~0.3% | |
| or 150000 deaths in USA with the assumptions above. | |
| Twice as many as in the bad 2017/2018 flu-season | |
| ------------------------------------------------------- | |
| also : | |
| 164 cases outside China with 0 deaths ; cfr=0 | |
| 7153 cases in Hubei with 249 deaths , cfr=3.5% | |
| 3992 cases outside Hubei with 9 deaths ; cfr=0.2% | |
| this supports the assumption that there are many nonconfirmed | |
| cases in Hubei | |
| #Post#: 59-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: estimating the cfr | |
| By: epsilon Date: February 6, 2020, 5:43 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Unfortunately it is still too early for a reliable CFR estimate. | |
| There are three major biases. | |
| First the unknown number of actual infections vs. reported | |
| numbers of confirmed cases. There are estimates of an ascertain | |
| rate of about 0.1 in the literature (i.e. actual cases = ten | |
| times reported cases). | |
| So this bias leads to a 10 times over-estimation of the true | |
| CFR. | |
| Second: The time lag issue between symptom onset and death. For | |
| SARS/MERS like illnesses (with the typical clinical picture of | |
| worsening pneumonia only after 10 days, then progressing to ARDS | |
| and ICU/ventilator support as is also typically reported for | |
| nCoV ) it is well established in the literature that average | |
| time from symptom onset to death with SARS is about three weeks | |
| (and even longer for the younger age groups). | |
| So we must not relate the number of deaths to the current number | |
| of cases but to the number of cases three weeks ago. Given the | |
| high case doubling rate of about 3-5 days, there were 10-100 | |
| times less cases three weeks ago. | |
| So this second bias leads to 10 to 100 times under estimation of | |
| the CFR. | |
| Third there is the aspect of reliability of information from | |
| authoritarian state officials when it comes to such important | |
| and sensitive figures like death rates from a new epidemic. This | |
| is not to say that there is "large scale" intentional | |
| desinformation. All in all we should trust China to not | |
| completely misrepresent the big picture (in its own interest) | |
| but it would not be surprising if the numbers are indeed | |
| somewhat "tuned" towards being less panic/fear inducing for the | |
| general public. | |
| Altogether there are so many sensitive parameters, assumptions | |
| and biases that it seems almost impossible to infer the true CFR | |
| at this time. | |
| I have extensively researched the topic in the past weeks but | |
| still I can neither rule out a best-case scenario with <0.1% | |
| Flu-like CFR nor can I rule out a worst case scenario with 15% | |
| SARS-Like CFR. | |
| We should get a better picture by end of February when the first | |
| 100-or-so closely observed "exported" cases outside china will | |
| have passed the 3-4 weeks mark after their symptom onset. | |
| Then we will have a reasonably unbiased sample of the final | |
| outcome of 100 closely monitored patients. | |
| #Post#: 66-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: estimating the cfr | |
| By: epsilon Date: February 7, 2020, 6:50 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Building upon the idea to only use the cases outside china (as a | |
| the most unbiased sample we have at this time), | |
| [attachimg=3] | |
| I thought about writing a little simulation program for | |
| calculating the probabilities (confidential intervals) of CFR | |
| given the known number of deaths among them (n=2 so far) and | |
| the distribution of time-to-death which has been described as | |
| Weibull-like distribution in the literature so far: | |
| [attachimg=2] | |
| Luckily I found that this work has already been done by a Swiss | |
| research group who put their code and figures on github: | |
| https://github.com/calthaus/ncov-cfr | |
| They even regularly update their estimates based on new fatal | |
| cases outside china. | |
| The most recent estimate is CFR = 2% (rightmost bar in the | |
| diagram) | |
| Confidence: 5% probability that CFR is below 0.1% or above 8.8% | |
| [attachimg=1] | |
| https://github.com/calthaus/ncov-cfr/blob/master/figures/ncov_cfr.png | |
| (Ironically: 2% is about the same number as given by the very | |
| naive and biased approach of the mass media to simply divide | |
| currently reported deaths by total cases) | |
| Remaining biases are: | |
| - Not counting for very mild/asymptomatic cases which would lead | |
| to CFR over-estimation. | |
| - avg. time to death could be higher (for SARS it was over 3 | |
| weeks) which would lead to CFR under-estimation | |
| Still, this is the first CFR estimate that I am reasonably | |
| confident in to be not too far off at least on the high side of | |
| the confidence interval. (regarding the low side I still hope | |
| that CFR will be lower in the end due to increasingly more very | |
| mild/asymptomatic infections) | |
| #Post#: 71-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: estimating the cfr | |
| By: gsgs Date: February 8, 2020, 1:30 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| take cases outside Wuhan or outside Hubei , that gives much more | |
| cases | |
| and still relatively few deaths. | |
| deaths in Hubei outside Wuhan started to climb on Jan29, since | |
| then ~12 deaths per day | |
| =1% of cases. | |
| deaths in Wuhan started ~Jan 25 | |
| deaths outside Hubei may be starting now slowly, 3,4,5 the last | |
| days | |
| -------------------------------- | |
| yes, I should have considered that time lag. I thought it were | |
| just a few days | |
| #Post#: 72-------------------------------------------------- | |
| UPDATE: Althaus CFR estimate now at 1.7% | |
| By: epsilon Date: February 8, 2020, 6:20 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| UPDATE: case fatality ratio of 2019-nCoV at | |
| 1.7% | |
| (95% confidence interval: 0.1%-7.5%) | |
| https://github.com/calthaus/ncov-cfr | |
| #Post#: 73-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: estimating the cfr | |
| By: epsilon Date: February 8, 2020, 6:29 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| @gsgs: | |
| [quote] | |
| take cases outside Wuhan or outside Hubei , that gives much more | |
| cases | |
| and still relatively few deaths. | |
| [/quote] | |
| Yes. And whats even more interesting: Much more "discharged" | |
| cases too. | |
| I did a very rough calculation CFR = fatal / (fatal + | |
| discharged) for all non-hubei provinces and it was only about | |
| 1%. | |
| This seems roughly consistent with the Christian Althaus | |
| estimate (that I posted recently and that I have much confidence | |
| in his model and method) which is based only on non-china cases | |
| and is now at CFR=1.7% | |
| This reminds me more and more of the situation with the 2009 | |
| H1N1 pandemic where the CFR was initially estimated 10% then 1% | |
| and in the end it was like less than 0.1%, i.e. really "just the | |
| flu". | |
| The other lesson from 2009 H1N1, however, was that it could NOT | |
| be contained. The global attack rate was 50%. We were lucky that | |
| the CFR turned out so benign. Hopefully it will be similar this | |
| time. | |
| However, there is a freightening scenario with the new Virus | |
| even if the final CFR would "only" be something like 0.5% and a | |
| 50% global attack rate which would still be a devastating | |
| pandemic with millions of deaths. | |
| #Post#: 76-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: estimating the cfr | |
| By: gsgs Date: February 8, 2020, 8:57 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| thanks for the cfr-updates. | |
| Yes, 1.7% is still pretty bad . | |
| however the case numbers are going down ! | |
| #Post#: 86-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: estimating the cfr | |
| By: gsgs Date: February 10, 2020, 6:12 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| 10 February 2020 - Imperial College London‌ | |
| Report 4: Severity of 2019-novel coronavirus (nCoV) | |
| (Download Report 4)‌ | |
| https://www.imperial.ac.uk/media/imperial-college/medicine/sph/ide/gida-fellows… | |
| this assumes a time-lag of 22.2 days from "confirmed" to "death" | |
| and it assumes that all cases are confirmed ; | |
| CFR=deaths/(confirmed cases) | |
| My data starts Jan.25, before that there were 572 confirmed | |
| cases in Wuhan, | |
| 157 in Hubei ex Wuhan, 558 in China ex Hubei. | |
| Currently there are ~70 daily deaths in Wuhan, 18 in Hubei ex | |
| Wuhan, 7 in China ex Hubei. | |
| If those cases pre-Jan.25 were all attributed to Jan.18 , then | |
| with the 22-day-lag | |
| I get CFR=12.2 in Wuhan, CFR=11.5 in Hubei ex Wuhan, 1.3% in | |
| China ex Hubei. | |
| Obviously many cases were unconfirmed, especially in Wuhan. | |
| There were those 5M people | |
| leaving the city at that time.It is likely that severe cases had | |
| a greater probability | |
| of being confirmed. | |
| You would expect deaths climbing sharply after 10-20 days | |
| already - even if 22 were the average. | |
| I do not see this. Deaths in Hubei ex Wuhan (where I'd assume | |
| not much underreporting) | |
| were 2,6,12,12,12,13,15,16,16,18,5,14,18,18 | |
| And we clearly have no exponential increase in confirmed cases | |
| as they assume | |
| -------------------------------------------- | |
| I'm unsure, that all doesn't make so much sense to me. | |
| The CFR might be changing. The CFR might be different in Wuhan. | |
| The 22-day-lag might be too long. | |
| (CFR=deaths per all infections). | |
| ------------------------------------------------------ | |
| and then we have "severe cases" . These counts were up quite a | |
| lot since Feb.03, | |
| but now they somehow have redefined "severe": | |
| daily reported new severe cases in Hunan Jan.26-Feb.09 : | |
| 109,400,189,89,106,200,268,139,442,377,564,918,119 3,52,258 | |
| daily reported new severe cases in China ex Hunan , | |
| Jan.26-Feb.09 : | |
| 28,115,74,42,51,68,47,47,50,54,96,44,87,135,38 (212) | |
| #Post#: 89-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: estimating the cfr | |
| By: epsilon Date: February 10, 2020, 7:52 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| "Obviously many cases were unconfirmed, especially in Wuhan. | |
| There were those 5M people | |
| leaving the city at that time.It is likely that severe cases had | |
| a greater probability | |
| of being confirmed." | |
| Th big question is: How prevalent was the virus already in the | |
| general community when Wuhan Quarantaine begun ? | |
| My gut feeling is at least 1% prevalence, maybe even 10% | |
| obviously (and hopefully) this would imply many more mild cases | |
| than assumed previously. | |
| Most models based on exported cases put the pre-shutdown absolut | |
| case numbers between 25k and 150k, corresponding to roughly | |
| 100k/10M = 1% prevalence. | |
| So there is, unfortunately, still large uncertainty of one order | |
| of magnitude (factor 10) about the actual pathogenity/severity | |
| of this virus. | |
| What we really need are seroprevalence studies for 2019nCoV | |
| antibodies in every large community. | |
| My hope is, that sero prevalence is very high already because | |
| this means that the vast majority of cases are mild or | |
| asymptomatic cases. | |
| But until we have the data, this may be just wishful thinking. | |
| #Post#: 95-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: estimating the cfr | |
| By: gsgs Date: February 11, 2020, 12:26 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| you could compare the Wuhan deathrate with the deathrate outside | |
| Wuhan | |
| to get ~ 2-3 times more real cases in Wuhan | |
| assuming no covered up deaths in Wuhan, assuming same real | |
| deathrates in and out Wuhan | |
| ~20 daily deaths in Wuhan, when it was quarantined. That's about | |
| the amount | |
| in Hubei ex Wuhan now - 14 days later | |
| so with that speed there had been ~400 cases in Wuhan ~Jan.10 | |
| redouble every 3-4 days to get 6400 cases on Jan24 , 100000 now | |
| =========================== | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| Next Page |