Distinguishing imported cases from locally acquired cases within a geographically limited genomic sample of an infectious disease

Author:

Didelot Xavier1ORCID,Helekal David2,Kendall Michelle1,Ribeca Paolo34

Affiliation:

1. School of Life Sciences and Department of Statistics, University of Warwick , Coventry CV4 7AL, UK

2. Centre for Doctoral Training in Mathematics for Real-World Systems, University of Warwick , Coventry CV4 7AL, UK

3. Gastrointestinal Bacteria Reference Unit, UK Health Security Agency , London NW9 5EQ, UK

4. Biomathematics and Statistics Scotland, The James Hutton Institute , Edinburgh EH9 3FD, UK

Abstract

Abstract Motivation The ability to distinguish imported cases from locally acquired cases has important consequences for the selection of public health control strategies. Genomic data can be useful for this, for example, using a phylogeographic analysis in which genomic data from multiple locations are compared to determine likely migration events between locations. However, these methods typically require good samples of genomes from all locations, which is rarely available. Results Here, we propose an alternative approach that only uses genomic data from a location of interest. By comparing each new case with previous cases from the same location, we are able to detect imported cases, as they have a different genealogical distribution than that of locally acquired cases. We show that, when variations in the size of the local population are accounted for, our method has good sensitivity and excellent specificity for the detection of imports. We applied our method to data simulated under the structured coalescent model and demonstrate relatively good performance even when the local population has the same size as the external population. Finally, we applied our method to several recent genomic datasets from both bacterial and viral pathogens, and show that it can, in a matter of seconds or minutes, deliver important insights on the number of imports to a geographically limited sample of a pathogen population. Availability and implementation The R package DetectImports is freely available from https://github.com/xavierdidelot/DetectImports. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

Funder

National Institute for Health Research

NIHR

Health Protection Research Unit in Genomics and Enabling Data

UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

EPSRC

EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Mathematics for Real-World Systems II

UK’s Crop Diversity Bioinformatics HPC

BBSRC

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Computational Mathematics,Computational Theory and Mathematics,Computer Science Applications,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Statistics and Probability

Reference62 articles.

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4. Three roads diverged? Routes to phylogeographic inference;Bloomquist;Trends Ecol. Evol,2010

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