Seqafrica: Empowering Africa’s Fight Against Antimicrobial Resistance Through Genomics
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Frontiers in Public Health
Abstract
The ongoing threat of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) demands capacity strengthening
in Africa for improved pathogen surveillance. The high-resolution picture of AMR
provided by pathogen whole genome sequencing (WGS) can help close data gaps
and inform disease prevention strategies, interventions and public health actions.
Here, we report on phase 1 of the Fleming Fund-supported SeqAfrica project
(2019–2023), one of the first genomic AMR surveillance networks in Africa. SeqAfrica
established five regional sequencing hubs across West, East, and Southern Africa,
expanded infrastructure, and delivered hybrid training programs to strengthen
workforce capacity. During phase 1, the network generated 29,269 pathogen
genomes (18,264 bacterial, 300 fungal, and 10,705 SARS-CoV-2) from 21 African
countries, contributing to 40 scientific publications and substantial genomic data
for national and global surveillance efforts, supporting outbreak investigations and
antimicrobial stewardship initiatives. The median turnaround time from sample
receipt to data release was 12 weeks (range: 3–104 weeks), demonstrating the
feasibility of genomic AMR surveillance despite logistical challenges. By nurturing
a community of practice, expanding the workforce, and translating data into
actionable insights, SeqAfrica has advanced the integration of pathogen genomics
into national and regional surveillance frameworks. However, sustaining this capacity
remains a challenge amid global funding constraints, procurement bottlenecks,
and workforce retention issues. Lessons learned from implementation include
successes in regional collaboration and persistent challenges in procurement,
workforce retention, and metadata completeness, which informed the design of
phase 2. As Africa continues to invest in genomic health infrastructure, SeqAfrica provides a proven model for embedding pathogen genomics into public health
strategies and strengthening AMR surveillance across the continent
Description
Research Article
Citation
Nilsson P, Gibson CT, Thornval NR, Lacy-Roberts N, Odgaard C, Owusu-Nyantakyi C, Amuasi GR, Boateng W, Mohktar Q, Bortey A, Odih EE, Sunmonu GT, Kumburu HH, Sonda T, Bhiman JN, Amoako DG, du Plessis M, Adu B, van Zwetselaar M, von Gottberg A, Mmbaga BT, Okeke IN, Smith AM, Egyir B and Hendriksen RS (2025) SeqAfrica: empowering Africa’s fight against antimicrobial resistance through genomics. Front. Public Health 13:1716498. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1716498
