Background Novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) causes an immense disease burden. Although public health countermeasures effectively controlled the epidemic in China, non-pharmaceutical interventions can neither be maintained indefinitely nor conveniently implemented globally. Vaccination is mainly used to prevent COVID-19, and most current antiviral treatment evaluations focus on clinical efficacy. Therefore, we conducted population-based simulations to assess antiviral treatment effectiveness among different age groups based on its clinical efficacy. Methods We collected COVID-19 data of Wuhan City from published literature and established a database (from 2 December 2019 to 16 March 2020). We developed an age-specific model to evaluate the effectiveness of antiviral treatment in patients with COVID-19. Efficacy was divided into three types: (1) viral activity reduction, reflected as transmission rate decrease [reduction was set as v (0–0.8) to simulate hypothetical antiviral treatments]; (2) reduction in the duration time from symptom onset to patient recovery/removal, reflected as a 1/ γ decrease (reduction was set as 1–3 days to simulate hypothetical or real-life antiviral treatments, and the time of asymptomatic was reduced by the same proportion); (3) fatality rate reduction in severely ill patients ( f c ) [reduction ( z ) was set as 0.3 to simulate real-life antiviral treatments]. The population was divided into four age groups (groups 1, 2, 3 and 4), which included those aged ≤ 14; 15–44; 45–64; and ≥ 65 years, respectively. Evaluation indices were based on outbreak duration, cumulative number of cases, total attack rate (TAR), peak date, number of peak cases, and case fatality rate ( f ). Results Comparing the simulation results of combination and single medication therapy s, all four age groups showed better results with combination medication. When 1/ γ = 2 and v = 0.4, age group 2 had the highest TAR reduction rate (98.48%, 56.01–0.85%). When 1/ γ = 2, z = 0.3, and v = 0.1, age group 1 had the highest reduction rate of f (83.08%, 0.71–0.12%). Conclusions Antiviral treatments are more effective in COVID-19 transmission control than in mortality reduction. Overall, antiviral treatments were more effective in younger age groups, while older age groups showed higher COVID-19 prevalence and mortality. Therefore, physicians should pay more attention to prevention of viral spread and patients deaths when providing antiviral treatments to patients of older age groups. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s40249-021-00835-2.
【저자키워드】 COVID-19, Antiviral treatment, Age group, Transmission model, 【초록키워드】 Treatment, coronavirus disease, public health, Coronavirus disease 2019, therapy, Mortality, Antiviral, Intervention, Antiviral treatment, viral spread, database, Novel coronavirus, Prevalence, China, Viral, Asymptomatic, outbreak, attack rate, Wuhan, Patient, Older age, Effectiveness, Case fatality rate, death, age, novel, group, medication, disease, Combination, Clinical efficacy, COVID-19 transmission, focus, reduction, symptom onset, supplementary material, city, Fatality rate, removal, severely ill patients, cumulative, physician, transmission rate, antiviral treatments, Prevent, effective, decrease, the epidemic, Result, highest, collected, evaluate, conducted, reflected, cause, groups, reduction in, was reduced, effectively controlled, hypothetical, patients with COVID-19, severely ill patient, 【제목키워드】 COVID-19 transmission,