Environmental air monitoring in international airports: A novel approach for enhanced pathogen surveillance
Gratalo, D.; Friedman, C. R.; Morley, V. J.; Qiu, X.; Rothstein, A. P.; Tiburcio, P. B.; Philipson, C. W.; Aichele, T. W. S.; Bart, S. M.; Jaynes, D.; Simen, B. B.; O'Connor, S. L.; O'Connor, D. H.
Show abstract
Early detection of outbreaks and emerging pathogens is critical for public health and global biosecurity. Airports, as major international travel hubs with dense, enclosed populations, are high-risk settings for disease transmission and potential pathogen introduction. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in collaboration with Ginkgo Biosecurity and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, implemented air monitoring for pathogen surveillance in congregate areas at four U.S. international airports. From October 2023 to August 2024, SARS-CoV-2 was detected by PCR in 98.3% of air samples and influenza A in 17.2%. These results correlated with positivity trends from other sample modalities, including aviation wastewater, traveler nasal swabs, and national clinical surveillance data. Targeted amplicon sequencing of SARS-CoV-2 from air samples correlated with contemporaneous lineages in wastewater collected and sequenced from the same airports. Metagenomic enrichment sequencing detected 30 viral species and recovered high-quality genomes for SARS-CoV-2, influenza, bocavirus, and seasonal coronaviruses. Together, these findings demonstrate that air sampling is a complementary surveillance modality to aviation wastewater for early pathogen detection at ports of entry.
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