The first wave of the COVID-19 epidemic in Spain was associated with early introductions and fast spread of a dominating genetic variant.

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2021-09-30

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López, Mariana G
Chiner-Oms, Álvaro
García de Viedma, Darío
Ruiz-Rodriguez, Paula
Bracho, Maria Alma
Cancino-Muñoz, Irving
D'Auria, Giuseppe
de Marco, Griselda
García-González, Neris
Goig, Galo Adrian

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The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has affected the world radically since 2020. Spain was one of the European countries with the highest incidence during the first wave. As a part of a consortium to monitor and study the evolution of the epidemic, we sequenced 2,170 samples, diagnosed mostly before lockdown measures. Here, we identified at least 500 introductions from multiple international sources and documented the early rise of two dominant Spanish epidemic clades (SECs), probably amplified by superspreading events. Both SECs were related closely to the initial Asian variants of SARS-CoV-2 and spread widely across Spain. We inferred a substantial reduction in the effective reproductive number of both SECs due to public-health interventions (Re 

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COVID-19
Communicable Disease Control
Humans
Incidence
Models, Statistical
Phylogeny
Physical Distancing
Quarantine
SARS-CoV-2
Severity of Illness Index
Spain

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