The abstract of A synthetic defective interfering SARS-CoV-2 is as follows.
Abstract
Viruses thrive by exploiting the cells they infect, but in order to replicate and infect other cells they must produce viral proteins. As a result, viruses are also susceptible to exploitation by defective versions of themselves that do not produce such proteins. A defective viral genome with deletions in protein-coding genes could still replicate in cells coinfected with full-length viruses. Such a defective genome could even replicate faster due to its shorter size, interfering with the replication of the virus. We have created a synthetic defective interfering version of SARS-CoV-2, the virus causing the Covid-19 pandemic, assembling parts of the viral genome that do not code for any functional protein but enable the genome to be replicated and packaged. This synthetic defective genome replicates three times faster than SARS-CoV-2 in coinfected cells, and interferes with it, reducing the viral load of infected cells by half in 24 hours. The synthetic genome is transmitted as efficiently as the full-length genome, suggesting the location of the putative packaging signal of SARS-CoV-2. A version of such a synthetic construct could be used as a self-promoting antiviral therapy: by enabling replication of the synthetic genome, the virus would promote its own demise.
I've highlighted "in coinfected cells"" because it seems to be key to how this would work as a "self-promoting antiviral therapy". To my understanding, the competition happens only within cells that have been infected with both viruses.
Just for example to describe my question, let's say that in an infected individual undergoing antiviral treatment with a synthetic defective interfering virus only $1 \times 10^{-3}$ pulmonary epithelial cells are infected by either virus. A naive application of statistics suggests only $1 \times 10^{-3}$ of cells infected with the disease-causing virus would also be infected by the synthetic defective interfering virus, while 99.9% of them would not be.
At that point I don't see how this is helping; it would require a large fraction or perhaps most, rather than only a small fraction of all of the patients pulmonary epithelial cells to have been infected before enough competitive events would take place for the synthetic defective interfering virus to actually cause the disease-causing virus to be threatened with "extinction" due to competition.
Is that how this would actually have to work in practice?
Question: How would a "synthetic defective interfering SARS-CoV-2" work in practice? Wouldn't it require a large fraction of all cells to be infected?