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The role of viral genomics in understanding COVID-19 outbreaks in long term care facilities

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

We reviewed all genomic epidemiology studies on COVID-19 in long term care facilities (LTCF) that had been published to date. We found that staff and residents were usually infected with identical, or near identical, SARS-CoV-2 genomes. Outbreaks usually involved one predominant cluster, and the same lineages persisted in LTCFs despite infection control measures. Outbreaks were most commonly due to single or few introductions followed by spread rather than a series of seeding events from the community into LTCFs. Sequencing of samples taken consecutively from the same cases showed persistence of the same genome sequence indicating that the sequencing technique was robust over time. When combined with local epidemiology, genomics facilitated likely transmission sources to be better characterised. Transmission between LTCFs was detected in multiple studies. The mortality rate amongst residents was high in all cases, regardless of the lineage. Bioinformatics methods were inadequate in one third of the studies reviewed, and reproducing the analyses was difficult as sequencing data were not available in many cases.

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Journal Title

The Lancet Microbe

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2666-5247
2666-5247

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
MRC (MC_PC_19027)
UK Research and Innovation (MC_PC_19027)
BBSRC, Research England E3 Fund, Wellcome Trust, Academy of Medical Sciences and the Health Foundation, MRC, NIHR