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Implementation of California COVIDNet – a multi-sector collaboration for statewide SARS-CoV-2 genomic surveillance

Authors :
Debra A. Wadford
Nikki Baumrind
Elizabeth F. Baylis
John M. Bell
Ellen L. Bouchard
Megan Crumpler
Eric M. Foote
Sabrina Gilliam
Carol A. Glaser
Jill K. Hacker
Katya Ledin
Sharon L. Messenger
Christina Morales
Emily A. Smith
Joel R. Sevinsky
Russell B. Corbett-Detig
Joseph DeRisi
Kathleen Jacobson
the COVIDNet Consortium
Summer Adams
Phacharee Arunleung
Matthew Bacinskas
Cynthia Bernas
Ricardo Berumen
Brandon Brown
Teal Bullick
Lyndsey Chaille
Alice Chen
Giorgio Cosentino
Yocelyn Cruz
Nick D’Angelo
Mojgan Deldari
Alex Espinosa
Ambar Espinoza
Shiffen Getabecha
Madeleine Glenn
Bianca Gonzaga
Ydelita Gonzales
Melanie Greengard
Hugo Guevara
Kim Hansard
April Hatada
Monica Haw
Thalia Huynh
Chantha Kath
Paul B. Kimsey
Deidra Lemoine
Ruth Lopez
Blanca Molinar
Samantha Munoz
Robert Nakamura
Nichole Osugi
Tasha Padilla
Chao-Yang Pan
Mayuri V. Panditrao
Chris Preas
Will Probert
Alexa Quintana
Maria Uribe-Fuentes
Mayra Ramirez
Clarence Reyes
Estela Saguar
Maria Salas
Ioana Seritan
Brandon Stavig
Hilary Tamnanchit
Serena Ting
Cindy Wong
Chelsea Wright
Shigeo Yagi
Venice Servellita
Alicia Sotomayor-Gonzalez
Charles Y. Chiu
Isabel Bjork
Joshua Kapp
Anouk van den Bout
Ellen Kephart
Mawadda Alnaeeli
Hau-Ling Poon
Scott Topper
Marzieh Shafii
Sara Sowko
Stephanie Trammell
Erik Wolfsohn
Patrick Ayscue
Amy Kistler
Emily Crawford
Cristina Tato
Valeria Arboledaz
Eleazar Eskin
Laila M. Sathe
Jacek Skarbinski
Abigail Duque
Jeffrey Schapiro
Ivy Yeung
Rama Ghatti
Zahra Shajani-Yi
Jacob M. Garrigues
Nicole Green
Peera Hemarajata
Carlos Anaya
Donna Ferguson
Beatrix Kapuszinsky
Favian Ramirez
Felipe Sta Agueda
Julia Wolfe
David Haussler
Marc Perry
Jakob McBroome
Nhi Duong
Deborah Forester
Anthony Gonzalez
Maria J. Victorio
Anna Liza M. Manlutac
Jeremy Corrigan
Nicholas S. Rhoades
Lina Castro
Godfred Masinde
Harmeet Kaur
Monica Paniagua-Alexander
Katrina G. Erwin
Glen Miller
Frances N. Sidhu
Morris Jones
Sangita Kothari
Christopher Ngo
Brandon Bonin
Daniel Castillo
Rensen Khoshabian
Kristian Andersen
Mark Zeller
Lisa Critchett
Carlos Gonzalez
Iryna V. Goraichuk
Rachel Rees
Frank Ambrosio
Curtis J. Kapsak
Kevin G. Libuit
Michelle R. Scribner
Sage M. Wright
Vanessa B. Cadiz
Denise Lopez
Matthew Rosman
Bryan Bach
Stacia Wyman
Charlotte Acharya
Ryan Davis
Richard Michelmore
Melanie Oakes
Suzanne Sandmeyer
Kathy Borkovich
Clay H. Clark
Holly Clark
Brandon Le
Peter De Hoff
Kristen Jepsen
Rob Knight
Louise C. Laurent
Zack Aralis
Carolina Arias
Varuzhan Balasanyan
Mark Duhon
Xinmin Li
Eric Chow
Nicole Leung
Delsy Martinez
Tyler T. Miyasaki
Ashlee Clow
Jared Hoffman
Thomas Rush
Source :
Frontiers in Public Health, Vol 11 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2023.

Abstract

IntroductionThe SARS-CoV-2 pandemic represented a formidable scientific and technological challenge to public health due to its rapid spread and evolution. To meet these challenges and to characterize the virus over time, the State of California established the California SARS-CoV-2 Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS) Initiative, or “California COVIDNet”. This initiative constituted an unprecedented multi-sector collaborative effort to achieve large-scale genomic surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 across California to monitor the spread of variants within the state, to detect new and emerging variants, and to characterize outbreaks in congregate, workplace, and other settings.MethodsCalifornia COVIDNet consists of 50 laboratory partners that include public health laboratories, private clinical diagnostic laboratories, and academic sequencing facilities as well as expert advisors, scientists, consultants, and contractors. Data management, sample sourcing and processing, and computational infrastructure were major challenges that had to be resolved in the midst of the pandemic chaos in order to conduct SARS-CoV-2 genomic surveillance. Data management, storage, and analytics needs were addressed with both conventional database applications and newer cloud-based data solutions, which also fulfilled computational requirements.ResultsRepresentative and randomly selected samples were sourced from state-sponsored community testing sites. Since March of 2021, California COVIDNet partners have contributed more than 450,000 SARS-CoV-2 genomes sequenced from remnant samples from both molecular and antigen tests. Combined with genomes from CDC-contracted WGS labs, there are currently nearly 800,000 genomes from all 61 local health jurisdictions (LHJs) in California in the COVIDNet sequence database. More than 5% of all reported positive tests in the state have been sequenced, with similar rates of sequencing across 5 major geographic regions in the state.DiscussionImplementation of California COVIDNet revealed challenges and limitations in the public health system. These were overcome by engaging in novel partnerships that established a successful genomic surveillance program which provided valuable data to inform the COVID-19 public health response in California. Significantly, California COVIDNet has provided a foundational data framework and computational infrastructure needed to respond to future public health crises.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22962565
Volume :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Public Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.70d4419c72944f60bdbb705c74bc8a0f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1249614