Takenouchi Toshiki, Iwasaki Yuka W, Harada Sei, Ishizu Hirotsugu, Uwamino Yoshifumi, Uno Shunsuke, Osada Asami, Abe Kodai, Hasegawa Naoki, Murata Mitsuru, Takebayashi Toru, Fukunaga Koichi, Saya Hideyuki, Kitagawa Yuko, Amagai Masayuki, Siomi Haruhiko, Kosaki Kenjiro
Department of Pediatrics, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Molecular Biology, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
J Hosp Infect. 2021 Jan;107:40-44. doi: 10.1016/j.jhin.2020.10.014. Epub 2020 Oct 24.
COVID-19 caused by SARS-CoV-2 is a worldwide problem. From the standpoint of hospital infection control, determining the source of infection is critical. We conducted the present study to evaluate the efficacy of using whole genome sequencing to determine the source of infection in hospitalized patients who do not have a clear infectious contact history. Recently, we encountered two seemingly separate COVID-19 clusters in a tertiary hospital. Whole viral genome sequencing distinguished the two clusters according to the viral haplotype. However, the source of infection was unclear in 14 patients with COVID-19 who were clinically unlinked to clusters #1 or #2. These patients, who had no clear history of infectious contact within the hospital ("undetermined source of infection"), had haplotypes similar to those in cluster #2 but did not have two of the mutations used to characterize cluster #2, suggesting that these 14 cases of "undetermined source of infection" were not derived from cluster #2. Whole viral genome sequencing can be useful for confirming that sporadic COVID-19 cases with an undetermined source of infection are indeed not part of clusters at the institutional level.
由严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)引起的2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)是一个全球性问题。从医院感染控制的角度来看,确定感染源至关重要。我们开展了本研究,以评估使用全基因组测序来确定无明确感染接触史的住院患者感染源的有效性。最近,我们在一家三级医院遇到了两个看似不相关的COVID-19聚集性病例。全病毒基因组测序根据病毒单倍型区分了这两个聚集性病例。然而,14例临床与聚集性病例1或2无关联的COVID-19患者的感染源尚不清楚。这些患者在医院内无明确的感染接触史(“感染源不明”),其单倍型与聚集性病例2相似,但不具有用于表征聚集性病例2的两个突变,这表明这14例“感染源不明”病例并非来自聚集性病例2。全病毒基因组测序有助于在机构层面确认感染源不明的散发性COVID-19病例确实不属于聚集性病例。