Estimated transmission dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 variants from wastewater are robust to differential shedding
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Date
2023-10-31
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Working Paper
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yes
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Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the development and adoption of wastewater-based epidemiology. Wastewater samples can provide genomic information for detecting and assessing the spread of SARS-CoV-2 variants in communities and for estimating important epidemiological parameters such as the growth advantage of the variant. However, despite demonstrated successes, epidemiological data derived from wastewater suffers from potential biases. Of particular concern are differential shedding profiles that different variants of concern exhibit, because they can shift the relationship between viral loads in wastewater and prevalence estimates derived from clinical cases. Using mathematical modeling, simulations, and Swiss surveillance data, we demonstrate that this bias does not affect estimation of the growth advantage of the variant and has only a limited and transient impact on estimates of the effective reproduction number. Thus, population-level epidemiological parameters derived from wastewater maintain their advantages over traditional clinical-derived estimates, even in the presence of differential shedding among variants.
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published
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Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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03790 - Beerenwinkel, Niko / Beerenwinkel, Niko
09490 - Stadler, Tanja / Stadler, Tanja
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Funding
205933 - WISE: Wastewater-based Infectious Disease Surveillance (SNF)
Related publications and datasets
Is previous version of: https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-c-000786165