Italy's Cassandra: the scientist who challenged WHO guidelines
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[June 30, 2020]
By Giselda Vagnoni
ROME (Reuters) - Andrea Crisanti says his
one regret is that he didn't yell loudly enough at the beginning, when
the dead had yet to pile up.
The Italian virologist has become a medical celebrity at home, a
contrarian who broke with initial World Health Organization (WHO)
guidelines on testing for the new coronavirus, deeming them narrow and
"stupid" -- something the U.N. agency denies.
While the WHO was advising governments back in January to only test
people showing symptoms of the virus, Crisanti, professor of
microbiology at Padua University, was convinced that some people could
catch the disease and spread it without even realising they were ill.
To combat such symptomless transmission, the 65-year-old scientist
called for broad testing even before the first flare-up came to light in
Italy in February. However, his request was rejected by officials in his
northern Veneto region, who relied initially on guidance from national
and international health authorities.
"All infectious diseases have an asymptomatic transmission component.
The longer the asymptomatic period, the more it has the ability to
transmit," Crisanti told Reuters this month. "The WHO guidelines were
wrong."
More than 34,700 people have died in Italy from COVID-19 over the past
four months – the world's fourth-highest tally after the United States,
Brazil and Britain.
There are multiple reasons for the large Italian death toll, including
the substantial number of vulnerable, elderly people in the country,
failures to isolate patients in some care homes and problems triggered
by an overstretched health service. Crisanti believes Italy's testing
strategy also needs to be scrutinised in any eventual review of the
pandemic.
The WHO has repeatedly defended its response to the crisis, saying it
acted "quickly and decisively" on the new illness. In its own early
guidelines, the organization also stated that nations needed to
"eventually test more broadly" to better assess the full extent of
contagion.
Unlike some countries, such as Germany and South Korea, Italy decided to
adhere rigidly to the initial testing advice. An official in the health
ministry in Rome said the guidance was based on the scientific evidence
available at the time.
"Five months after the outbreak of the virus there are still many things
we do not know about it. This is not the moment to say what went right
and what went wrong," said the official, who declined to be named
because of the sensitivity of the issue.
PRESSURE
As news of the mystery illness started to emerge from China in early
January, Crisanti said he immediately believed the virus could be
transmitted by asymptomatic patients.
A month before Italy reported its first official death from the disease
on Feb 21, his university laboratory developed a test to detect the
virus and obtained enough diagnostic reagents to make 500,000 swabs.
However, health authorities in Veneto, a region of five million people,
blocked his first planned testing programme in February, when he sought
permission to swab students returning from China's Lunar New Year
holidays, regardless of whether they had symptoms. In a letter seen by
Reuters, dated Feb. 11, the regional health body asked which relevant
organization was recommending such action and questioned who would pay.
In the face of resistance, Crisanti dropped the plan. "Under a lot of
pressure, I let myself be swayed to minimise the gravity of the
situation," he said.
The regional health authority declined to comment on the incident.
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Dr Andrea Crisanti poses in London, Britain September 14, 2018.
Picture taken September 14, 2018. Federica Bernardini/Handout via
REUTERS
Other voices were also starting to raise the alarm about
asymptomatic transmission. In Germany, Camilla Rothe and fellow
medics at Munich University Hospital had come to the same conclusion
as Crisanti after looking into Germany's first coronavirus case – a
local businessman infected by a Chinese colleague who had been
unaware that she was ill .
But Crisanti says much of the scientific world ignored the evidence
that was starting to accumulate. Discouraged, he headed to Australia
for a conference on malaria and was still travelling when news broke
that Italy had discovered its first cases -- in Veneto and the
adjacent region of Lombardy. He returned home immediately.
While the Lombardy outbreak initially struck a cluster of 10 towns,
Veneto was fortunate that its early flare-up was confined to a
single small town near Padua, Vo Euganeo, which had a population of
just 3,000.
Taking on board the advice of his health experts including Crisanti,
Veneto governor Luca Zaia said he ignored central government
recommendations and allowed tests for all Vo's residents, regardless
of whether they felt ill. The results revealed that almost 3% were
infected by the disease, yet most of them had no symptoms – evidence
Crisanti says that supported the theory of asymptomatic
transmission.
“VERY RARE”
The issue continues to spark disagreement between scientists and the
WHO.
This month, Crisanti joined a chorus of criticism over a WHO
official's remark that such asymptomatic transmission was "very
rare". The official, Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO's technical lead on the
pandemic, later qualified her comment, saying up to 40% of
transmissions may be asymptomatic.
The Italian Health Ministry official said it was too soon to judge
the WHO position. "This is not the moment to draw a conclusion about
the WHO handling of the pandemic. There will be the right time and
the right place."
All those found to be infected in Vo were placed under mandatory
quarantine and despite continued assertions from national
authorities that mass testing was unnecessary, Zaia told reporters
that he accepted a request from Crisanti to conduct a second round
of swabs in Vo.
This showed that only six residents had the virus. They were put in
isolation and by the middle of March the contagion had been stamped
out in the town.
Widescale testing has continued across the region and by June 28,
Veneto had carried out 944,010 swab tests against 1,022,440 in
Lombardy, despite having half the population of its larger neighbour.
Lombardy leaders have said they did not have the capacity to handle
further testing. They also say the virus was more diffuse in their
region, making it harder to contain than in Veneto. As of Sunday,
Lombardy had registered 93,761 cases and 16,639 deaths against
19,275 cases and 2,008 deaths in Veneto.
(Editing by Mark Bendeich and Crispian Balmer)
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