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- Title
Uncovering Infant Group B Streptococcal (GBS) Disease Clusters in the United Kingdom and Ireland Through Genomic Analysis: A Population-based Epidemiological Study.
- Authors
Collin, Simon M; Groves, Natalie; O'Sullivan, Catherine; Jauneikaite, Elita; Patel, Darshana; Cunney, Robert; Meehan, Mary; Reynolds, Arlene; Smith, Andrew; Lindsay, Diane; Doherty, Lorraine; Davies, Eleri; Chalker, Victoria; Lamb, Peter; Afshar, Baharak; Balasegaram, Sooria; Coelho, Juliana; Ready, Derren; Brown, Colin S; Efstratiou, Androulla
- Abstract
Background The true frequency of hospital outbreaks of invasive group B streptococcal (iGBS; Streptococcus agalactiae) disease in infants is unknown. We used whole genome sequencing (WGS) of iGBS isolates collected during a period of enhanced surveillance of infant iGBS disease in the UK and Ireland to determine the number of clustered cases. Methods Potentially linked iGBS cases from infants with early (<7 days of life) or late-onset (7–89 days) disease were identified from WGS data (HiSeq 2500 platform, Illumina) from clinical sterile site isolates collected between 04/2014 and 04/2015. We assessed time and place of cases to determine a single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) difference threshold for clustered cases. Case details were augmented through linkage to national hospital admission data and hospital record review by local microbiologists. Results Analysis of sequences indicated a cutoff of ≤5 SNP differences to define iGBS clusters. Among 410 infant iGBS isolates, we identified 7 clusters (4 genetically identical pairs with 0 SNP differences, 1 pair with 3 SNP differences, 1 cluster of 4 cases with ≤1 SNP differences) of which 4 clusters were uncovered for the first time. The clusters comprised 16 cases, of which 15 were late-onset (of 192 late-onset cases with sequenced isolates) and 1 an early-onset index case. Serial intervals between cases ranged from 0 to 59 (median 12) days. Conclusions Approximately 1 in 12 late-onset infant iGBS cases were part of a hospital cluster. Over half of the clusters were previously undetected, emphasizing the importance of routine submission of iGBS isolates to reference laboratories for cluster identification and genomic confirmation.
- Subjects
UNITED Kingdom; IRELAND; DISEASE clusters; PUBLIC health surveillance; SEQUENCE analysis; SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms; STREPTOCOCCAL diseases; GENOMICS; EPIDEMICS; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research
- Publication
Clinical Infectious Diseases, 2021, Vol 72, Issue 9, pe296
- ISSN
1058-4838
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/cid/ciaa1087