Phylogenetic prioritization of HIV-1 transmission clusters with viral lineage-level diversification rates

Author:

Miller Rachel L12ORCID,McLaughlin Angela12,Liang Richard H3,Harding John4,Wong Jason5,Le Anh Q3,Brumme Chanson J36ORCID,Montaner Julio S G67,Joy Jeffrey B126ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Molecular Epidemiology and Evolutionary Genetics, British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS , Vancouver, Canada

2. Bioinformatics Program, University of British Columbia , Vancouver, Canada

3. Laboratory Program, British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS , Vancouver, Canada

4. Vancouver Coastal Health , Vancouver, Canada

5. Clinical Prevention Services, British Columbia Centre for Disease Control , Vancouver, Canada

6. Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia , Vancouver, Canada

7. British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS , Vancouver, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Background and objectives Public health officials faced with a large number of transmission clusters require a rapid, scalable and unbiased way to prioritize distribution of limited resources to maximize benefits. We hypothesize that transmission cluster prioritization based on phylogenetically derived lineage-level diversification rates will perform as well as or better than commonly used growth-based prioritization measures, without need for historical data or subjective interpretation. Methodology 9822 HIV pol sequences collected during routine drug resistance genotyping were used alongside simulated sequence data to infer sets of phylogenetic transmission clusters via patristic distance threshold. Prioritized clusters inferred from empirical data were compared to those prioritized by the current public health protocols. Prioritization of simulated clusters was evaluated based on correlation of a given prioritization measure with future cluster growth, as well as the number of direct downstream transmissions from cluster members. Results Empirical data suggest diversification rate-based measures perform comparably to growth-based measures in recreating public heath prioritization choices. However, unbiased simulated data reveals phylogenetic diversification rate-based measures perform better in predicting future cluster growth relative to growth-based measures, particularly long-term growth. Diversification rate-based measures also display advantages over growth-based measures in highlighting groups with greater future transmission events compared to random groups of the same size. Furthermore, diversification rate measures were notably more robust to effects of decreased sampling proportion. Conclusions and implications Our findings indicate diversification rate-based measures frequently outperform growth-based measures in predicting future cluster growth and offer several additional advantages beneficial to optimizing the public health prioritization process.

Funder

Genome Canada and Genome BC Bioinformatics and Computational Biology

National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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