Prospective, Real-time Metagenomic Sequencing During Norovirus Outbreak Reveals Discrete Transmission Clusters

Author:

Casto Amanda M1,Adler Amanda L2,Makhsous Negar3,Crawford Kristen1,Qin Xuan1,Kuypers Jane M3,Huang Meei-Li3,Zerr Danielle M24,Greninger Alexander L3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle

2. Seattle Children’s Hospital, University of Washington, Seattle

3. Department of Laboratory Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle

4. Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington, Seattle

Abstract

Abstract Background Norovirus outbreaks in hospital settings are a common challenge for infection prevention teams. Given the high burden of norovirus in most communities, it can be difficult to distinguish between ongoing in-hospital transmission of the virus and new introductions from the community, and it is challenging to understand the long-term impacts of outbreak-associated viruses within medical systems using traditional epidemiological approaches alone. Methods Real-time metagenomic sequencing during an ongoing norovirus outbreak associated with a retrospective cohort study. Results We describe a hospital-associated norovirus outbreak that affected 13 patients over a 27-day period in a large, tertiary, pediatric hospital. The outbreak was chronologically associated with a spike in self-reported gastrointestinal symptoms among staff. Real-time metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) of norovirus genomes demonstrated that 10 chronologically overlapping, hospital-acquired norovirus cases were partitioned into 3 discrete transmission clusters. Sequencing data also revealed close genetic relationships between some hospital-acquired and some community-acquired cases. Finally, this data was used to demonstrate chronic viral shedding by an immunocompromised, hospital-acquired case patient. An analysis of serial samples from this patient provided novel insights into the evolution of norovirus within an immunocompromised host. Conclusions This study documents one of the first applications of real-time mNGS during a hospital-associated viral outbreak. Given its demonstrated ability to detect transmission patterns within outbreaks and elucidate the long-term impacts of outbreak-associated viral strains on patients and medical systems, mNGS constitutes a powerful resource to help infection control teams understand, prevent, and respond to viral outbreaks.

Funder

University of Washington

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)

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