A territory-wide study of early COVID-19 outbreak in Hong Kong community: A clinical, epidemiological and phylogenomic investigation

Author:

Leung Kenneth Siu-Sing,Ng Timothy Ting-Leung,Wu Alan Ka-Lun,Yau Miranda Chong-Yee,Lao Hiu-Yin,Choi Ming-Pan,Tam Kingsley King-Gee,Lee Lam-Kwong,Wong Barry Kin-Chung,Ho Alex Yat-Man,Yip Kam-Tong,Lung Kwok-Cheung,Liu Raymond Wai-To,Tso Eugene Yuk-Keung,Leung Wai-Shing,Chan Man-Chun,Ng Yuk-Yung,Sin Kit-Man,Fung Kitty Sau-Chun,Chau Sandy Ka-Yee,To Wing-Kin,Que Tak-Lun,Shum David Ho-Keung,Yip Shea Ping,Yam Wing Cheong,Siu Gilman Kit-HangORCID

Abstract

AbstractInitial cases of COVID-19 reported in Hong Kong were mostly imported from China. However, most cases reported in February 2020 were locally-acquired infections, indicating local community transmissions. We extracted the demographic, clinical and epidemiological data from 50 COVID-19 patients, who accounted for 53.8% of the cases in Hong Kong by February 2020. Whole-genome sequencing of the SARS-CoV-2 were conducted to determine the phylogenetic relatedness and transmission dynamics. Only three (6.0%) patients required ICU admission. Phylogenetic analysis identified six transmission clusters. All locally-acquired cases harboured a common mutation Orf3a G251V and were clustered in two subclades in global phylogeny of SARS-CoV-2. The estimated time to the most recent common ancestor of local COVID-2019 outbreak was December 24, 2019 with an evolutionary rate of 3.04×10−3 substitutions per site per year. The reproduction number value was 1.84. Social distancing and vigilant epidemiological control are crucial to the containment of COVID-19 transmission.Article summary linesA combined epidemiological and phylogenetic analysis of early COVID-19 outbreak in Hong Kong revealed that a SARS-CoV-2 variant with ORF3a G251V mutation accounted for all locally acquired cases, and that asymptomatic carriers could be a huge public health risk for COVID-19 control.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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