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Evolution and epidemic spread of SARS-CoV-2 in Brazil

Authors :
Candido, Darlan S
Claro, Ingra M
de Jesus, Jaqueline G
Souza, William M
Moreira, Filipe RR
Dellicour, Simon
Mellan, Thomas A
du Plessis, Louis
Pereira, Rafael HM
Sales, Flavia CS
Manuli, Erika R
Thézé, Julien
Almeida, Luiz
Menezes, Mariane T
Voloch, Carolina M
Fumagalli, Marcilio J
Coletti, Thaís M
da Silva, Camila AM
Ramundo, Mariana S
Amorim, Mariene R
Hoeltgebaum, Henrique H
Mishra, Swapnil
Gill, Mandev S
Carvalho, Luiz M
Buss, Lewis F
Prete, Carlos A
Ashworth, Jordan
Nakaya, Helder I
Peixoto, Pedro S
Brady, Oliver J
Nicholls, Samuel M
Tanuri, Amilcar
Rossi, Átila D
Braga, Carlos KV
Gerber, Alexandra L
de C Guimarães, Ana Paula
Gaburo, Nelson
Alencar, Cecila Salete
Ferreira, Alessandro CS
Lima, Cristiano X
Levi, José Eduardo
Granato, Celso
Ferreira, Giulia M
Francisco, Ronaldo S
Granja, Fabiana
Garcia, Marcia T
Moretti, Maria Luiza
Perroud, Mauricio W
Castiñeiras, Terezinha MPP
Lazari, Carolina S
Hill, Sarah C
de Souza Santos, Andreza Aruska
Simeoni, Camila L
Forato, Julia
Sposito, Andrei C
Schreiber, Angelica Z
Santos, Magnun NN
de Sá, Camila Zolini
Souza, Renan P
Resende-Moreira, Luciana C
Teixeira, Mauro M
Hubner, Josy
Leme, Patricia AF
Moreira, Rennan G
Nogueira, Maurício L
Brazil-UK Centre for Arbovirus Discovery, Diagnosis, Genomics an
Ferguson, Neil M
Costa, Silvia F
Proenca-Modena, José Luiz
Vasconcelos, Ana Tereza R
Bhatt, Samir
Lemey, Philippe
Wu, Chieh-Hsi
Rambaut, Andrew
Loman, Nick J
Aguiar, Renato S
Pybus, Oliver G
Sabino, Ester C
Faria, Nuno Rodrigues
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2020.

Abstract

Brazil currently has one of the fastest-growing severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) epidemics in the world. Because of limited available data, assessments of the impact of nonpharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) on this virus spread remain challenging. Using a mobility-driven transmission model, we show that NPIs reduced the reproduction number from >3 to 1 to 1.6 in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. Sequencing of 427 new genomes and analysis of a geographically representative genomic dataset identified >100 international virus introductions in Brazil. We estimate that most (76%) of the Brazilian strains fell in three clades that were introduced from Europe between 22 February and 11 March 2020. During the early epidemic phase, we found that SARS-CoV-2 spread mostly locally and within state borders. After this period, despite sharp decreases in air travel, we estimated multiple exportations from large urban centers that coincided with a 25% increase in average traveled distances in national flights. This study sheds new light on the epidemic transmission and evolutionary trajectories of SARS-CoV-2 lineages in Brazil and provides evidence that current interventions remain insufficient to keep virus transmission under control in this country.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00368075
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....a8242dd1cc04d8642c0748346016882d