Eduardo Henderson, Florencia Díaz-Viraqué, Bernardina Rivera, Ignacio Ferrés, Adriana Nabón, Rodney Colina, Raquel Rosa, Marianoel Pereira-Gómez, Jose L. Badano, Diego Simón, Luis Barbeito, Alvaro Fajardo, Otto Pritsch, Andrés Abin, Fernando López-Tort, Carlos Robello, Gustavo Brito, Paula Perbolianachis, Gonzalo Greif, Leticia Zarantonelli, Fabián Aldunate, Rosario Durán, Ricardo Ehrlich, Fernando Paganini, Henry Cohen, Miguel Alegretti, Jorge Rodriguez-Duarte, Cecilia Fernández, María E. Cruces, Carlos Batthyány, Maria E. Francia, Gonzalo Moratorio, Mónica Marín, Cecilia Salazar, Juan Cristina, Gustavo Gagliano, Gregorio Iraola, Victoria Bonnecarrere, Paola Scavone, Alicia Costábile, Matías Fabregat, Rodrigo Arim, Miguel Sierra, Pilar Moreno, Mariana Bresque, Rafael Radi, Matías Maidana, Vanesa Piattoni, and Estela Bidegain
BackgroundSouth America has become the new epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic with more than 1.1M reported cases and >50,000 deaths (June 2020). Conversely, Uruguay stands out as an outlier managing this health crisis with remarkable success.MethodsWe developed a molecular diagnostic test to detect SARS-CoV-2. This methodology was transferred to research institutes, public hospitals and academic laboratories all around the country, creating a “COVID-19 diagnostic lab network”. Uruguay also implemented active epidemiological surveillance following the “Test, Trace and Isolate” (TETRIS) strategy coupled to real-time genomic epidemiology.ResultsThree months after the first cases were detected, the number of positive individuals reached 826 (23 deaths, 112 active cases and 691 recovered). The Uruguayan strategy was based in a close synergy established between the national health authorities and the scientific community. In turn, academia rapidly responded to develop national RT-qPCR tests. Consequently, Uruguay was able to perform ∼1,000 molecular tests per day in a matter of weeks. The “COVID-19 diagnostic lab network” performed more than 54% of the molecular tests in the country. This, together with real- time genomics, were instrumental to implement the TETRIS strategy, helping to contain domestic transmission of the main outbreaks registered so far.ConclusionsUruguay has successfully navigated the first trimester of the COVID-19 health crisis in South America. A rapid response by the scientific community to increase testing capacity, together with national health authorities seeking out the support from the academia were fundamental to successfully contain, until now, the COVID-19 outbreak in the country.