P-2171. Genomic epidemiology of Human Respiratory Syncytial Virus in vaccinated and unvaccinated adults in Atlanta, Georgia, during the 2024–2025 season
Said Rachida, Henok A Tafesse, Mackenzie Duford, Hannah Cayla C Dakanay, Alaa Ahmed, Anne Piantadosi

TL;DR
This study analyzed RSV strains in vaccinated and unvaccinated adults in Georgia, finding high genetic diversity and low vaccine uptake, emphasizing the need for genomic surveillance.
Contribution
The study provides insights into RSV genetic diversity and vaccine uptake in adults during the 2024–2025 season.
Findings
RSV-A sequences showed high clade and lineage diversity, with lineage A.D.3.1 being the most common.
RSV-B sequences were predominantly from lineage B.D.E.1, with other lineages detected in smaller proportions.
Only 20.5% of vaccine-eligible patients had been vaccinated against RSV.
Abstract
Human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a leading cause of lower respiratory tract infections in high-risk individuals. The recent introduction of vaccines and prophylactic monoclonal antibodies is expected to reduce the clinical and public health impact of RSV but may also create selective pressure for immune escape among circulating viruses. We evaluated clinical and demographic data from 183 adult patients who presented to Emory University Hospital between September 21, 2024, and March 26, 2025. We collected residual upper respiratory swab samples and performed subgroup-specific RT-PCR followed by viral whole-genome sequencing using the xGen™ Respiratory Virus Amplicon Panel and phylogenetic analyses using Nextstrain. Among 183 adult patients, the median age was 61 (range: 18–99), and 69.5% were female. Most patients (97.8%) were symptomatic; 12.9% were hospitalized, 2.2%…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory viral infections research · Virology and Viral Diseases · SARS-CoV-2 detection and testing
