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Global disparities in SARS-CoV-2 genomic surveillance

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-10, 05:15 authored by AF Brito, E Semenova, G Dudas, GW Hassler, CC Kalinich, MUG Kraemer, J Ho, H Tegally, G Githinji, CN Agoti, LE Matkin, C Whittaker, T Kantardjiev, N Korsun, S Stoitsova, R Dimitrova, I Trifonova, V Dobrinov, L Grigorova, I Stoykov, I Grigorova, A Gancheva, A Jennison, L Leong, D Speers, R Baird, L Cooley, K Kennedy, J de Ligt, W Rawlinson, S van Hal, D Williamson, R Singh, SM Nathaniel-Girdharrie, L Edghill, L Indar, J St. John, G Gonzalez-Escobar, V Ramkisoon, A Brown-Jordan, A Ramjag, N Mohammed, JE Foster, I Potter, S Greenaway-Duberry, K George, S Belmar-George, J Lee, J Bisasor-McKenzie, N Astwood, R Sealey-Thomas, H Laws, N Singh, A Oyinloye, P McMillan, A Hinds, N Nandram, R Parasram, Z Khan-Mohammed, S Charles, A Andrewin, D Johnson, S Keizer-Beache, C Oura, OG Pybus, NR Faria, M Stegger, M Albertsen, A Fomsgaard, M Rasmussen, R Khouri, F Naveca, T Graf, F Miyajima, G Wallau, F Motta, S Khare, L Freitas, C Schiavina, G Bach, MB Schultz, YH Chew, M Makheja, P Born, G Calegario, S Romano, J Finello, A Diallo, RTC Lee, YN Xu, W Yeo, S Tiruvayipati, S Yadahalli, E Wilkinson, A Iranzadeh, J Giandhari, D Doolabh, S Pillay, U Ramphal, JE San
AbstractGenomic sequencing is essential to track the evolution and spread of SARS-CoV-2, optimize molecular tests, treatments, vaccines, and guide public health responses. To investigate the global SARS-CoV-2 genomic surveillance, we used sequences shared via GISAID to estimate the impact of sequencing intensity and turnaround times on variant detection in 189 countries. In the first two years of the pandemic, 78% of high-income countries sequenced >0.5% of their COVID-19 cases, while 42% of low- and middle-income countries reached that mark. Around 25% of the genomes from high income countries were submitted within 21 days, a pattern observed in 5% of the genomes from low- and middle-income countries. We found that sequencing around 0.5% of the cases, with a turnaround time <21 days, could provide a benchmark for SARS-CoV-2 genomic surveillance. Socioeconomic inequalities undermine the global pandemic preparedness, and efforts must be made to support low- and middle-income countries improve their local sequencing capacity.

History

Journal

Nature Communications

Volume

13

Article number

7003

Pagination

1-13

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2041-1723

eISSN

2041-1723

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

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