Application of Broad-Spectrum, Sequence-Based Pathogen Identification in an Urban Population

被引:25
作者
Lin, Baochuan [1 ]
Malanoski, Anthony P. [1 ]
Wang, Zheng [2 ]
Blaney, Kate M. [2 ]
Ligler, Adam G. [2 ]
Rowley, Robb K. [3 ]
Hanson, Eric H. [3 ]
von Rosenvinge, Erik [4 ]
Ligler, Frances S. [1 ]
Kusterbeck, Anne W. [1 ]
Metzgar, David [5 ]
Barrozo, Christopher P. [5 ]
Russell, Kevin L. [5 ]
Tibbetts, Clark [3 ]
Schnur, Joel M. [1 ]
Stenger, David A. [1 ]
机构
[1] USN, Res Lab, Ctr Bio Mol Sci & Engn, Washington, DC 20375 USA
[2] NOVA Res Inc, Alexandria, VA USA
[3] Headquarters USAF Surg Gen, Falls Church, VA USA
[4] Malcolm Grow USAF Med Ctr, Andrews AFB, MD USA
[5] Naval Hlth Res Ctr, Ctr Deployment Hlth Res, Dept Def, San Diego, CA USA
来源
PLOS ONE | 2007年 / 2卷 / 05期
关键词
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0000419
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
A broad spectrum detection platform that provides sequence level resolution of target regions would have a significant impact in public health, case management, and means of expanding our understanding of the etiology of diseases. A previously developed respiratory pathogen microarray (RPM v.1) demonstrated the capability of this platform for this purpose. This newly developed RPM v.1 was used to analyze 424 well-characterized nasal wash specimens from patients presenting with febrile respiratory illness in the Washington, D. C. metropolitan region. For each specimen, the RPM v.1 results were compared against composite reference assay (viral and bacterial culture and, where appropriate, RT-PCR/PCR) results. Across this panel, the RPM assay showed >= 98% overall agreement for all the organisms detected compared with reference methods. Additionally, the RPM v.1 results provide sequence information which allowed phylogenetic classification of circulating influenza A viruses in similar to 250 clinical specimens, and allowed monitoring the genetic variation as well as antigenic variability prediction. Multiple pathogens (2-4) were detected in 58 specimens (13.7%) with notably increased abundances of respiratory colonizers (esp. S. pneumoniae) during viral infection. This first-ever comparison of a broad-spectrum viral and bacterial identification technology of this type against a large battery of conventional "gold standard'' assays confirms the utility of the approach for both medical surveillance and investigations of complex etiologies of illness caused by respiratory co-infections.
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