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SARS-CoV-2 diagnostic testing rates determine the sensitivity of genomic surveillance programs

Authors :
Alvin X. Han
Amy Toporowski
Jilian A. Sacks
Mark D. Perkins
Sylvie Briand
Maria van Kerkhove
Emma Hannay
Sergio Carmona
Bill Rodriguez
Edyth Parker
Brooke E. Nichols
Colin A. Russell
Medical Microbiology and Infection Prevention
AII - Infectious diseases
Source :
Nature genetics, 55(1), 26-33. Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Zenodo, 2022.

Abstract

The first step in SARS-CoV-2 genomic surveillance is testing to identify people who are infected. However, global testing rates are falling as we emerge from the acute health emergency and remain low in many low- and middle-income countries (mean = 27 tests per 100,000 people per day). We simulated COVID-19 epidemics in a prototypical low- and middle-income country to investigate how testing rates, sampling strategies and sequencing proportions jointly impact surveillance outcomes, and showed that low testing rates and spatiotemporal biases delay time to detection of new variants by weeks to months and can lead to unreliable estimates of variant prevalence, even when the proportion of samples sequenced is increased. Accordingly, investments in wider access to diagnostics to support testing rates of approximately 100 tests per 100,000 people per day could enable more timely detection of new variants and reliable estimates of variant prevalence. The performance of global SARS-CoV-2 genomic surveillance programs is fundamentally limited by access to diagnostic testing.

Subjects

Subjects :
Genetics

Details

ISSN :
10614036
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature genetics, 55(1), 26-33. Nature Publishing Group
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d0f12d094d5a6e356f11cb34b2bbc397
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7245330