Since early 2022 the Omicron variant has rapidly spread worldwide, becoming the dominant variant to date. The study aimed to investigate the clinical and epidemiological characteristics of COVID-19 patients and reconstruct the genomic epidemiology of main SARS-CoV-2 Omicron sublineages in Italy in 2022. A total of 8970 SARS-CoV-2 samples were studied, and phylogenetic analyses were focused on BA.1, BA.2, and BA.5 subvariants. More than half of subjects received three doses of vaccine and experienced a reinfection. A significant larger proportion of unvaccinated subjects presented reinfection compared with vaccinated. Clusters presented a tMRCA between September–November 2021 (BA.1), November 2021–January 2022 (BA.2), and October 2021–May 2022 (BA.5). Re values showed the highest level between September–October, January–February 2022, and May 2022 for BA.1, BA.2 and BA.5, respectively. Limited number of studied variant sequences are included in clusters. The spread rate of the studied variant exceeded its evolutionary rate. No single sublineage had sufficient time to differentiate into large clusters, but only into small and fragmented groups sharing the same recent ancestor. These analyses dissect the epidemiological dynamics of Omicron sublineages in Italy over a period of great epidemiological changes in the COVID-19 epidemic.
Genomic Epidemiology of the Main SARS‐CoV‐2 Variants Circulating in Italy During the Omicron Era / A. Bergna, A. Lai, F. Sagradi, S. Menzo, N. Mancini, B. Bruzzone, S. Rusconi, G. Marchegiani, N. Clementi, D. Francisci, I. Vicenti, S. Ronchiadin, H.D. Mbissam, C. della Ventura, L. Lanfranchi, S. Testa, S. Caucci, C. Acciarri, L. Carioti, A. Occhionero, F. Novazzi, A.P. Genoni, F.D. Ferrante, V. De Pace, M. Ferraris, M. Ogliastro, A. Gabrieli, M. De Paschale, G. Canavesi, M.C. Bellocchi, M. Iannetta, L. Sarmati, F. Ceccherini‐silberstein, A. Riva, S. Antinori, G. Zehender, N. Null. - In: JOURNAL OF MEDICAL VIROLOGY. - ISSN 0146-6615. - 97:2(2025 Feb), pp. e70215.1-e70215.13. [10.1002/jmv.70215]
Genomic Epidemiology of the Main SARS‐CoV‐2 Variants Circulating in Italy During the Omicron Era
A. BergnaPrimo
;A. Lai
Secondo
;F. Sagradi;S. Rusconi;H.D. Mbissam;C. della Ventura;A. Gabrieli;G. Canavesi;A. Riva;S. Antinori;G. Zehender;
2025
Abstract
Since early 2022 the Omicron variant has rapidly spread worldwide, becoming the dominant variant to date. The study aimed to investigate the clinical and epidemiological characteristics of COVID-19 patients and reconstruct the genomic epidemiology of main SARS-CoV-2 Omicron sublineages in Italy in 2022. A total of 8970 SARS-CoV-2 samples were studied, and phylogenetic analyses were focused on BA.1, BA.2, and BA.5 subvariants. More than half of subjects received three doses of vaccine and experienced a reinfection. A significant larger proportion of unvaccinated subjects presented reinfection compared with vaccinated. Clusters presented a tMRCA between September–November 2021 (BA.1), November 2021–January 2022 (BA.2), and October 2021–May 2022 (BA.5). Re values showed the highest level between September–October, January–February 2022, and May 2022 for BA.1, BA.2 and BA.5, respectively. Limited number of studied variant sequences are included in clusters. The spread rate of the studied variant exceeded its evolutionary rate. No single sublineage had sufficient time to differentiate into large clusters, but only into small and fragmented groups sharing the same recent ancestor. These analyses dissect the epidemiological dynamics of Omicron sublineages in Italy over a period of great epidemiological changes in the COVID-19 epidemic.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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