Application of a VP4/VP2-inferred transmission clusters in estimating the impact of interventions on rhinovirus transmission

Background Despite the clinical burden attributable to rhinovirus (RV) infections, the RV transmission dynamics and the impact of interventions on viral transmission remain elusive. Methods A total of 3,935 nasopharyngeal specimens were examined, from which the VP4/VP2 gene was sequenced and genotyp...

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Main Authors: Ng, Kim Tien, Ng, Liang Jie, Oong, Xiang Yong, Chook, Jack Bee, Chan, Kok Gan, Takebe, Yutaka, Kamarulzaman, Adeeba, Tee, Kok Keng
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Published: BMC 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/32749/
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spelling my.um.eprints.327492022-08-10T02:47:09Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/32749/ Application of a VP4/VP2-inferred transmission clusters in estimating the impact of interventions on rhinovirus transmission Ng, Kim Tien Ng, Liang Jie Oong, Xiang Yong Chook, Jack Bee Chan, Kok Gan Takebe, Yutaka Kamarulzaman, Adeeba Tee, Kok Keng QR355 Virology Background Despite the clinical burden attributable to rhinovirus (RV) infections, the RV transmission dynamics and the impact of interventions on viral transmission remain elusive. Methods A total of 3,935 nasopharyngeal specimens were examined, from which the VP4/VP2 gene was sequenced and genotyped. RV transmission clusters were reconstructed using the genetic threshold of 0.005 substitutions/site, estimated from the global VP4/VP2 sequences. A transmission cluster is characterized by the presence of at least two individuals (represent by nodes), whose viral sequences are genetically linked (represent by undirected edges) at the estimated genetic distance threshold supported by bootstrap value of >= 90%. To assess the impact of facemask, pleconaril and social distancing on RV transmission clusters, trials were simulated for interventions with varying efficacy and were evaluated based on the reduction in the number of infected patients (nodes) and the reduction in the number of nodes-connecting edges. The putative impact of intervention strategies on RV transmission clusters was evaluated through 10,000 simulations. Results A substantial clustering of 168 RV transmission clusters of varying sizes were observed. This suggests that RV disease burden observed in the population was largely due to multiple sub-epidemics, predominantly driven by RV-A, followed by RV-C and -B. No misclassification of RV species and types were observed, suggesting the specificity and sensitivity of the analysis. Through 10,000 simulations, it was shown that social distancing may be effective in decelerating RV transmission, by removing more than 95% of nodes and edges within the RV transmission clusters. However, facemask removed less than 8% and 66% of nodes and edges, respectively, conferring moderate advantage in limiting RV transmission. Conclusion Here, we presented a network-based approach of which the degree of RV spread that fuel disease transmission in the region was mapped for the first time. The utilization of RV transmission clusters in assessing the putative impact of interventions on disease transmission at the population level was demonstrated. BMC 2022-03-04 Article PeerReviewed Ng, Kim Tien and Ng, Liang Jie and Oong, Xiang Yong and Chook, Jack Bee and Chan, Kok Gan and Takebe, Yutaka and Kamarulzaman, Adeeba and Tee, Kok Keng (2022) Application of a VP4/VP2-inferred transmission clusters in estimating the impact of interventions on rhinovirus transmission. Virology Journal, 19 (1). ISSN 1743-422X, DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s12985-022-01762-w <https://doi.org/10.1186/s12985-022-01762-w>. 10.1186/s12985-022-01762-w
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic QR355 Virology
spellingShingle QR355 Virology
Ng, Kim Tien
Ng, Liang Jie
Oong, Xiang Yong
Chook, Jack Bee
Chan, Kok Gan
Takebe, Yutaka
Kamarulzaman, Adeeba
Tee, Kok Keng
Application of a VP4/VP2-inferred transmission clusters in estimating the impact of interventions on rhinovirus transmission
description Background Despite the clinical burden attributable to rhinovirus (RV) infections, the RV transmission dynamics and the impact of interventions on viral transmission remain elusive. Methods A total of 3,935 nasopharyngeal specimens were examined, from which the VP4/VP2 gene was sequenced and genotyped. RV transmission clusters were reconstructed using the genetic threshold of 0.005 substitutions/site, estimated from the global VP4/VP2 sequences. A transmission cluster is characterized by the presence of at least two individuals (represent by nodes), whose viral sequences are genetically linked (represent by undirected edges) at the estimated genetic distance threshold supported by bootstrap value of >= 90%. To assess the impact of facemask, pleconaril and social distancing on RV transmission clusters, trials were simulated for interventions with varying efficacy and were evaluated based on the reduction in the number of infected patients (nodes) and the reduction in the number of nodes-connecting edges. The putative impact of intervention strategies on RV transmission clusters was evaluated through 10,000 simulations. Results A substantial clustering of 168 RV transmission clusters of varying sizes were observed. This suggests that RV disease burden observed in the population was largely due to multiple sub-epidemics, predominantly driven by RV-A, followed by RV-C and -B. No misclassification of RV species and types were observed, suggesting the specificity and sensitivity of the analysis. Through 10,000 simulations, it was shown that social distancing may be effective in decelerating RV transmission, by removing more than 95% of nodes and edges within the RV transmission clusters. However, facemask removed less than 8% and 66% of nodes and edges, respectively, conferring moderate advantage in limiting RV transmission. Conclusion Here, we presented a network-based approach of which the degree of RV spread that fuel disease transmission in the region was mapped for the first time. The utilization of RV transmission clusters in assessing the putative impact of interventions on disease transmission at the population level was demonstrated.
format Article
author Ng, Kim Tien
Ng, Liang Jie
Oong, Xiang Yong
Chook, Jack Bee
Chan, Kok Gan
Takebe, Yutaka
Kamarulzaman, Adeeba
Tee, Kok Keng
author_facet Ng, Kim Tien
Ng, Liang Jie
Oong, Xiang Yong
Chook, Jack Bee
Chan, Kok Gan
Takebe, Yutaka
Kamarulzaman, Adeeba
Tee, Kok Keng
author_sort Ng, Kim Tien
title Application of a VP4/VP2-inferred transmission clusters in estimating the impact of interventions on rhinovirus transmission
title_short Application of a VP4/VP2-inferred transmission clusters in estimating the impact of interventions on rhinovirus transmission
title_full Application of a VP4/VP2-inferred transmission clusters in estimating the impact of interventions on rhinovirus transmission
title_fullStr Application of a VP4/VP2-inferred transmission clusters in estimating the impact of interventions on rhinovirus transmission
title_full_unstemmed Application of a VP4/VP2-inferred transmission clusters in estimating the impact of interventions on rhinovirus transmission
title_sort application of a vp4/vp2-inferred transmission clusters in estimating the impact of interventions on rhinovirus transmission
publisher BMC
publishDate 2022
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/32749/
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