Authors
Arnaud N’Guessan, Alexandra Tsitouras, Fernando Sanchez-Quete, Eyerusalem Goitom, Sarah J Reiling, Jose Hector Galvez, Thanh Luan Nguyen, Ha Thanh Loan Nguyen, Flavia Visentin, Mounia Hachad, Kateryna Krylova, Sara Matthews, Susanne A Kraemer, Paul Stretenowich, Mathieu Bourgey, Haig Djambazian, Shu-Huang Chen, Anne-Marie Roy, Brent Brookes, Sally Lee, Marie-Michelle Simon, Thomas Maere, Peter A Vanrolleghem, Marc-Andre Labelle, Sandrine Moreira, Inès Levade, Guillaume Bourque, Jiannis Ragoussis, Sarah Dorner, Dominic Frigon, B Jesse Shapiro
Publication date
2022/2/1
Journal
medRxiv
Pages
2022.02. 01.22270170
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Description
Wastewater-based epidemiology has emerged as a promising tool to monitor pathogens in a population, particularly when clinical diagnostic capacities become overwhelmed. During the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic caused by Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2), several jurisdictions have tracked viral concentrations in wastewater to inform public health authorities. While some studies have also sequenced SARS-CoV-2 genomes from wastewater, there have been relatively few direct comparisons between viral genetic diversity in wastewater and matched clinical samples from the same region and time period. Here we report sequencing and inference of SARS-CoV-2 mutations and variant lineages (including variants of concern) in 936 wastewater samples and thousands of matched clinical sequences collected between March 2020 and July 2021 in the cities of Montreal, Quebec City, and Laval, representing almost half the population of the Canadian province of Quebec. We benchmarked our sequencing and variant-calling methods on known viral genome sequences to establish thresholds for inferring variants in wastewater with confidence. We found that variant frequency estimates in wastewater and clinical samples are correlated over time in each city, with similar dates of first detection. Across all variant lineages, wastewater detection is more concordant with targeted outbreak sequencing than with semi-random clinical swab sampling. Most variants were first observed in clinical and outbreak data due to higher sequencing rate. However, wastewater sequencing is highly efficient, detecting more variants …
Total citations
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