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Large-scale genomic epidemiology reveals the cryptic outbreaks, hidden persistent reservoirs, and spatiotemporal dynamics of Vibrio parahaemolyticus

Controlling foodborne diseases requires robust outbreak detection and a comprehensive understanding of outbreak dynamics. Here, by integrating large-scale phylogenomic analysis of 3,642 isolates and epidemiological data, we performed “data-driven” outbreak detection and described the long-term outbr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature Microbiology 2022
Main Authors: Yang, Chao, Li, Yinghui, Jiang, Min, Wang, Lei, Jiang, Yixiang, Hu, Lulu, Shi, Xiaolu, He, Lianhua, Cai, Rui, Wu, Shuang, Qiu, Yaqun, Lu, Linying, Zuo, Le, Chen, Qiongcheng, Wu, Yarong, Martinez-Urtaza, Jaime, Wan, Chengsong, Yang, Ruifu, Cui, Yujun, Hu, Qinghua
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Language:English
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Summary:Controlling foodborne diseases requires robust outbreak detection and a comprehensive understanding of outbreak dynamics. Here, by integrating large-scale phylogenomic analysis of 3,642 isolates and epidemiological data, we performed “data-driven” outbreak detection and described the long-term outbreak dynamics of the leading seafood-associated bacterial pathogen, Vibrio parahaemolyticus, in a high-prevalence city, Shenzhen, China, over a 17-year period. Different from the widely accepted notion that sporadic patients and independent point-source outbreaks dominated foodborne infections, we found that 71% of isolates from patients grouped into within-1-month clusters that differed by ≤6 SNPs, indicating putative outbreaks; 56% of these clusters contained isolates exclusively from previously defined “sporadic” patients, representing unrecognized cryptic outbreaks. Furthermore, we showed that despite the long time spans between clusters, 70% of them were genomically closely related and were inferred to arise from a small number of common sources, which provides evidence that hidden persistent reservoirs generated most of the outbreaks, rather than independent point-sources. Phylogeographical analysis further revealed the geographical heterogeneity of outbreaks and identified a coastal district as the potential hotspot of outbreaks and as the hub and major source of cross-district spread events. Our findings provide a comprehensive picture of the long-term spatiotemporal dynamics of foodborne outbreaks for the first time and present a novel perspective on the major source of foodborne infections, which will inform the design of future foodborne disease control strategies.
DOI:10.21203/rs.3.rs-1255817/v1