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Combined epidemiological and genomic analysis of nosocomial SARS-CoV-2 infection early in the pandemic and the role of unidentified cases in transmission

Authors :
Snell, Luke B
Fisher, Chloe L
Taj, Usman
Stirrup, Oliver
Merrick, Blair
Alcolea-Medina, Adela
Charalampous, Themoula
Signell, Adrian W
Wilson, Harry D
Betancor, Gilberto
Kia Ik, Mark Tan
Cunningham, Emma
Cliff, Penelope R
Pickering, Suzanne
Galao, Rui Pedro
Batra, Rahul
Neil, Stuart JD
Malim, Michael H
Doores, Katie J
Douthwaite, Sam T
Nebbia, Gaia
COVID-19 Genomics UK (COG-UK) Consortium
Edgeworth, Jonathan D
Awan, Ali R
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To analyse nosocomial transmission in the early stages of the coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic at a large multisite healthcare institution. Nosocomial incidence is linked with infection control interventions. METHODS: Viral genome sequence and epidemiological data were analysed for 574 consecutive patients, including 86 nosocomial cases, with a positive PCR test for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) during the first 19 days of the pandemic. RESULTS: Forty-four putative transmission clusters were found through epidemiological analysis; these included 234 cases and all 86 nosocomial cases. SARS-CoV-2 genome sequences were obtained from 168/234 (72%) of these cases in epidemiological clusters, including 77/86 nosocomial cases (90%). Only 75/168 (45%) of epidemiologically linked, sequenced cases were not refuted by applying genomic data, creating 14 final clusters accounting for 59/77 sequenced nosocomial cases (77%). Viral haplotypes from these clusters were enriched 1-14x (median 4x) compared to the community. Three factors implicated unidentified cases in transmission: (a) community-onset or indeterminate cases were absent in 7/14 clusters (50%), (b) four clusters (29%) had additional evidence of cryptic transmission, and (c) in three clusters (21%) diagnosis of the earliest case was delayed, which may have facilitated transmission. Nosocomial cases decreased to low levels (0-2 per day) despite continuing high numbers of admissions of community-onset SARS-CoV-2 cases (40-50 per day) and before the impact of introducing universal face masks and banning hospital visitors. CONCLUSION: Genomics was necessary to accurately resolve transmission clusters. Our data support unidentified cases-such as healthcare workers or asymptomatic patients-as important vectors of transmission. Evidence is needed to ascertain whether routine screening increases case ascertainment and limits nosocomial transmission.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b90edc32a1ad0fdeb52d1537f0310dab