SARS-CoV-2 variants associated with vaccine breakthrough in the Delaware Valley January-August 2021
Main Authors: | Andrew Marques, Scott Sherrill-Mix, John K. Everett, Frederic Bushman |
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Format: | Article Journal |
Terbitan: |
, 2021
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: |
https://zenodo.org/record/5559699 |
Daftar Isi:
- The severe acute respiratory coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) is the cause of the global outbreak of COVID-19. Evidence suggests that the virus is evolving to allow efficient spread through the human population, including vaccinated individuals. Here we report a study of viral variants from the Delaware Valley, including the city of Philadelphia, and variants infecting vaccinated subjects. We sequenced and analyzed complete viral genomes from 2641 surveillance samples, and compared them to genome sequences from 159 vaccine breakthroughs. In the early spring of 2020, all detected variants were of the B.1 lineage. A mixture of lineages followed, notably including B.1.243 followed by B.1.1.7 (alpha), with other lineages present at lower levels. Later isolations were dominated by B.1.617.2 (delta), which was the exclusive variant present by the last time sampled. To investigate whether any variants appeared preferentially in vaccine breakthroughs, we devised a model based on Bayesian autoregressive moving average logistic multinomial regression to allow rigorous comparison. This revealed that B.1.617.2 (delta) showed potential modest enricment in vaccine breakthroughs (odds ratio of 3; 95% credible interval 0.89-11). Viral point substitutions could also be associated with vaccine breakthroughs, notably the N501Y substitution found in the alpha, beta and gamma variants (odds ratio 2.02; 95% credible interval of 1.26-3.14). This study thus provides a detailed picture of viral evolution in the Delaware Valley and a geographically matched analysis of vaccine breakthroughs, and also introduces a rigorous statistical approach to interrogating enrichment of viral variants.