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SARS-CoV-2 European resurgence foretold: interplay of introductions and persistence by leveraging genomic and mobility data

SARS-CoV-2 European resurgence foretold: interplay of introductions and persistence by leveraging genomic and mobility data
SARS-CoV-2 European resurgence foretold: interplay of introductions and persistence by leveraging genomic and mobility data

Following the first wave of SARS-CoV-2 infections in spring 2020, Europe experienced a resurgence of the virus starting late summer that was deadlier and more difficult to contain. Relaxed intervention measures and summer travel have been implicated as drivers of the second wave. Here, we build a phylogeographic model to evaluate how newly introduced lineages, as opposed to the rekindling of persistent lineages, contributed to the COVID-19 resurgence in Europe. We inform this model using genomic, mobility and epidemiological data from 10 West European countries and estimate that in many countries more than 50% of the lineages circulating in late summer resulted from new introductions since June 15th. The success in onwards transmission of these lineages is predicted by SARS-CoV-2 incidence during this period. Relatively early introductions from Spain into the United Kingdom contributed to the successful spread of the 20A.EU1/B.1.177 variant. The pervasive spread of variants that have not been associated with an advantage in transmissibility highlights the threat of novel variants of concern that emerged more recently and have been disseminated by holiday travel. Our findings indicate that more effective and coordinated measures are required to contain spread through cross-border travel.

Lemey, Philippe
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Ruktanonchai, Nick
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Hong, Samuel
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Colizza, Vittoria
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Poletto, Chiara
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den Broeck, Frederik Van
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Gill, Mandev
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Ji, Xiang
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Levasseur, Anthony
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Sadilek, Adam
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Lai, Shengjie
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Tatem, Andrew
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Baele, Guy
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Suchard, Marc
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Dellicour, Simon
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Lemey, Philippe
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Ruktanonchai, Nick
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Hong, Samuel
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Colizza, Vittoria
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Poletto, Chiara
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den Broeck, Frederik Van
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Gill, Mandev
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Ji, Xiang
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Levasseur, Anthony
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Sadilek, Adam
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Lai, Shengjie
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Tatem, Andrew
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Baele, Guy
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Suchard, Marc
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Dellicour, Simon
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Lemey, Philippe, Ruktanonchai, Nick, Hong, Samuel, Colizza, Vittoria, Poletto, Chiara, den Broeck, Frederik Van, Gill, Mandev, Ji, Xiang, Levasseur, Anthony, Sadilek, Adam, Lai, Shengjie, Tatem, Andrew, Baele, Guy, Suchard, Marc and Dellicour, Simon (2021) SARS-CoV-2 European resurgence foretold: interplay of introductions and persistence by leveraging genomic and mobility data. (doi:10.21203/rs.3.rs-208849/v1).

Record type: Other

Abstract

Following the first wave of SARS-CoV-2 infections in spring 2020, Europe experienced a resurgence of the virus starting late summer that was deadlier and more difficult to contain. Relaxed intervention measures and summer travel have been implicated as drivers of the second wave. Here, we build a phylogeographic model to evaluate how newly introduced lineages, as opposed to the rekindling of persistent lineages, contributed to the COVID-19 resurgence in Europe. We inform this model using genomic, mobility and epidemiological data from 10 West European countries and estimate that in many countries more than 50% of the lineages circulating in late summer resulted from new introductions since June 15th. The success in onwards transmission of these lineages is predicted by SARS-CoV-2 incidence during this period. Relatively early introductions from Spain into the United Kingdom contributed to the successful spread of the 20A.EU1/B.1.177 variant. The pervasive spread of variants that have not been associated with an advantage in transmissibility highlights the threat of novel variants of concern that emerged more recently and have been disseminated by holiday travel. Our findings indicate that more effective and coordinated measures are required to contain spread through cross-border travel.

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Published date: 10 February 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 456068
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/456068
PURE UUID: f196971e-61c2-4c89-be31-da53dc9dd287
ORCID for Shengjie Lai: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9781-8148
ORCID for Andrew Tatem: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7270-941X

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Date deposited: 25 Apr 2022 16:50
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:52

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Contributors

Author: Philippe Lemey
Author: Nick Ruktanonchai
Author: Samuel Hong
Author: Vittoria Colizza
Author: Chiara Poletto
Author: Frederik Van den Broeck
Author: Mandev Gill
Author: Xiang Ji
Author: Anthony Levasseur
Author: Adam Sadilek
Author: Shengjie Lai ORCID iD
Author: Andrew Tatem ORCID iD
Author: Guy Baele
Author: Marc Suchard
Author: Simon Dellicour

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