Inferring Sexual Network Bridging Using Genomics: A Simulation Study
Kline, M. C.; Helekal, D.; Oliveira Roster, K. I.; Grad, Y.
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The dynamics of sexually transmitted infections involve interconnected transmission networks, including men who have sex with men and heterosexual populations. Understanding the extent of bridging between these networks can inform surveillance, guide interventions, and aid in the interpretation of their impact, but methods for quantifying bridging have been lacking. Here, we addressed whether pathogen genomics tools, successfully used to reconstruct transmission in other contexts, could accurately infer sexual network bridging. Based on simulations of gonorrhea spread, we evaluated phylodynamic bridging metrics inferred by ancestral state reconstruction under a range of sampling schemes, from comprehensive to sparse. These metrics differentiated sexual network structures even with biased sampling schemes, but accuracy depended on the sampling scheme and density: phylodynamic bridging estimates using sequences from all detected infections for one network configuration were on average 6.9% above the true value, whereas estimates from 5% of infections in symptomatic men with many partners were on average >1000% above the true value. These results suggest routine overestimation of bridging from unadjusted inferences from genomics data and provide context for interpreting existing genomic surveillance data and targeted studies.
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