Estimating the evolution of effective infection fatality rates during the course of the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany
Several seroprevalence studies have been or are currently conducted in order to estimate the infection fatality rate (IFR) of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). The IFR is one of the most discussed figures in the context of this pandemic. In contrast to the case fatality rate (CFR), the IFR depends on the total number of infected individuals - not just on the number of confirmed cases. As the mortality of COVID-19 largely increases with age, it is important to take the age distribution of infected individuals into account. Based on the example of Germany, this study illustrates the time-dependent evolution of effective IFR over the course of the pandemic, by combining age-group specific IFR estimates from multiple recent studies worldwide with publicly available German surveillance data. Three different methods for estimating (effective) IFRs are presented: (a) population-averaged IFRs based on the assumption that the infection risk is independent of age and time, (b) effective IFRs based on the assumption that the age distribution of confirmed cases approximately reflects the age distribution of infected individuals, and (c) effective IFRs accounting for age- and time-dependent dark figures of infections. Results for Germany show that effective IFRs are estimated to vary largely over time. A comparison of estimated IFRs with observed CFRs indicates that a substantial fraction of the time-dependent variability in observed mortality can be explained by the evolving age distribution of infections. In addition, the vanishing gap between estimated effective IFR and observed CFR is discussed in light of the assumptions of the analysis. Further research is warranted to obtain timely age-stratified IFR estimates for Germany.
READ FULL TEXT