COVID-19 pandemic interventions reshaped the global dispersal of seasonal influenza viruses

The global dynamics of seasonal influenza viruses inform the design of surveillance, intervention, and vaccination strategies. The COVID-19 pandemic provided a singular opportunity to evaluate how influenza circulation worldwide was perturbed by human behavioral changes. We combine molecular, epidem...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 2024-11, Vol.386 (6722), p.eadq3003
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Zhiyuan, Tsui, Joseph L-H, Gutierrez, Bernardo, Busch Moreno, Simon, du Plessis, Louis, Deng, Xiaowei, Cai, Jun, Bajaj, Sumali, Suchard, Marc A, Pybus, Oliver G, Lemey, Philippe, Kraemer, Moritz U G, Yu, Hongjie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The global dynamics of seasonal influenza viruses inform the design of surveillance, intervention, and vaccination strategies. The COVID-19 pandemic provided a singular opportunity to evaluate how influenza circulation worldwide was perturbed by human behavioral changes. We combine molecular, epidemiological, and international travel data and find that the pandemic's onset led to a shift in the intensity and structure of international influenza lineage movement. During the pandemic, South Asia played an important role as a phylogenetic trunk location of influenza A viruses, whereas West Asia maintained the circulation of influenza B/Victoria. We explore drivers of influenza lineage dynamics across the pandemic period and reasons for the possible extinction of the B/Yamagata lineage. After a period of 3 years, the intensity of among-region influenza lineage movements returned to pre-pandemic levels, with the exception of B/Yamagata, after the recovery of global air traffic, highlighting the robustness of global lineage dispersal patterns to substantial perturbation.
ISSN:0036-8075
1095-9203
1095-9203
DOI:10.1126/science.adq3003