Combined effect of early diagnosis and treatment on the case fatality risk of COVID-19 in Japan, 2020

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Abstract

Japanese government initially enforced restrictions on outpatient attendances among febrile individuals suspected of having COVID-19, asking everyone to remain at home for at least 4 days from the onset of fever. This restriction was cancelled on 8 May 2020, and a new antiviral, remdesivir, was approved from 7 May 2020. To investigate how this policy change influenced the prognosis of people with COVID-19, we estimated the case fatality risk as a function of the date of illness onset from April to June 2020. We used an interrupted time-series analysis model with an intervention date of 8 May 2020, and estimated time-dependent case fatality risk by age group. The case fatality risk showed a decreasing trend in all groups, and models were favored accounting for an abrupt causal effect, i.e., immediate decline in fatality risk. The trend was estimated at − 1.1% (95% CI [confidence interval]: − 3.9, 3.0) among people aged 60–69 years, − 7.2% (95% CI − 11.2, − 2.4) among those aged 70–79 years, − 7.4% (95% CI − 14.2, 0.2) among those aged 80–89 years, and − 10.3% (95% CI − 21.1, 2.7) among those aged 90 and over. Early diagnosis and treatment greatly contributed to reducing the case fatality risk.

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Amemiya, Y., & Nishiura, H. (2023). Combined effect of early diagnosis and treatment on the case fatality risk of COVID-19 in Japan, 2020. Scientific Reports, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-33929-y

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