2026. 03NGS
Capture sequencing demonstrates promising public health potential for post-COVID wastewater surveillance: a comparative multi-technique and spatiotemporal analysis
Xiaokang Li, Bin Xu, Zhisheng Lai, Jianqiu Qin, Changwei Liang, Hong Xu, Deqian Zhou, Huanning Zhou, Xueshan Zhong, Zhiming Liu, Chuanhao Cheng, Yan Long, Weiya Mao, Conghui Liao, Wenru Feng, Yu Ma, Linlin Zhang, Daoqin Wang, Hongwei Tu, Changhua He... Ch
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Abstract
Wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) has emerged as a scalable and cost-effective strategy for monitoring SARS-CoV-2 throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. In the post-COVID era, however, reliance on conventional molecular techniques, such as reverse transcription quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) and amplicon-based targeted next-generation sequencing (tNGS), limits comprehensive pathogen surveillance due to restricted genomic coverage and throughput, hindering early detection of emerging public health threats. In this study, we evaluated a hybrid capture-based sequencing (HybCapSeq) workflow using five probe panels, including three commercial and two custom panels, to compare SARS-CoV-2 detection performance and per-sample reagent cost with those of RT-qPCR and tNGS. We then applied the comprehensive viral capture panel for longitudinal wastewater surveillance (N = 343) across seven types of sampling sites in two Chinese cities. Temporal trends in SARS-CoV-2 genomic coverage derived from capture sequencing preceded reported clinical case trends by 1–2 weeks, demonstrating its potential as an early-warning indicator for wastewater monitoring. Compared with RT-qPCR, tNGS, and metatranscriptomic sequencing (MetaT), the capture-based approach showed comparable or superior performance in SARS-CoV-2 detection and variant tracking, while also enabling simultaneous detection of diverse human-pathogenic viruses, identification of putative novel viral taxa, and characterization of environmental virome composition. In addition, bacterial reads accounted for 95.05% of total reads in hybrid capture libraries (95% CI: 94.42–95.67%), highlighting the potential of this approach for profiling of bacterial and antimicrobial resistance genes in wastewater. These findings endorse HybCapSeq, combined with strategic probe design and site selection, as a robust WBE platform for pathogen surveillance, epidemic preparedness, and public health response in the post-COVID era.