Transmission lineage dynamics and the detection of viral importation in emerging epidemics

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The accurate inference of pathogen movements between locations during an epidemic is crucial for measuring infectious disease spread and for informing effective control strategies. Phylogeographic methods can reconstruct historical patterns of disease dissemination by combining the evolutionary history of sampled pathogen genomes with geographic information. Despite a substantial expansion of pathogen genomics during and since the COVID-19 pandemic, only a small fraction of infections are typically sampled and sequenced, leading to an underestimation of the true intensity of viral importation. Here, we seek to understand the sampling processes underlying this underestimation. We show that the coupling of viral importation and local transmission dynamics can result in local transmission lineages with different size distributions, influencing the probability that individual viral importation events will be detected. Using analytical and simulation approaches, we demonstrate that both the proportion of importation events detected and the temporal patterns of inferred importation are highly sensitive to importation dynamics and local transmission parameters. Our findings highlight the importance of interpreting phylogeographic estimates in the context of outbreak conditions, particularly when comparing viral movements across time and among different epidemic settings. These insights are critical for improving the reliability of genomic epidemiology approaches in the design of public health responses.

Article activity feed