Comprehensive contact tracing during an outbreak of alpha-variant SARS-CoV-2 in a rural community reveals less viral genomic diversity and higher household secondary attack rates than expected.
Audun SivertsenNicolay MortensenUnni SolemEivind ValenMarie Francoise BullitaKnut-Arne WensaasSverre LitleskareGuri RørtveitHarleen M S GrewalElling UlvestadPublished in: mSphere (2024)
In outbreak investigations, obtaining a full overview of infected individuals within a population is seldom achieved. We here present an example where a single introduction of B1.1.7 SARS-CoV-2 within a rural community allowed for tracing of the virus from an introductor via dissemination through larger gatherings into households. The outbreak occurred before widespread vaccination, allowing for a "natural" outbreak development with community lockdown. We show through sequencing that the virus can infect up to five consecutive persons without gaining mutations, thereby showing that contact tracing seems more important than sequencing for local outbreak investigations in settings with few alternative introductory transmission pathways. We also show how larger households where a child introduced transmission appeared more likely to promote further spread of the virus compared to households with an adult as the primary introductor.