| Literature DB >> 30026887 |
Jessica D Forbes1,2,3, Natalie C Knox3, Christy-Lynn Peterson3, Aleisha R Reimer3.
Abstract
Clinical metagenomics (CMg) is the discipline that refers to the sequencing of all nucleic acid material present within a clinical specimen with the intent to recover clinically relevant microbial information. From a diagnostic perspective, next-generation sequencing (NGS) offers the ability to rapidly identify putative pathogens and predict their antimicrobial resistance profiles to optimize targeted treatment regimens. Since the introduction of metagenomics nearly a decade ago, numerous reports have described successful applications in an increasing variety of biological specimens, such as respiratory secretions, cerebrospinal fluid, stool, blood and tissue. Considerable advancements in sequencing and computational technologies in recent years have made CMg a promising tool in clinical microbiology laboratories. Moreover, costs per sample and turnaround time from specimen receipt to clinical management continue to decrease, making the prospect of CMg more feasible. Many difficulties, however, are associated with CMg and warrant further improvements such as the informatics infrastructure and analytical pipelines. Thus, the current review focuses on comprehensively assessing applications of CMg for diagnostic and subtyping purposes.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical metagenomics; Clinical microbiology laboratory; Culture-independent diagnostic test; Diagnosis; Next-generation sequencing; Pathogen detection
Year: 2018 PMID: 30026887 PMCID: PMC6050174 DOI: 10.1016/j.csbj.2018.02.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comput Struct Biotechnol J ISSN: 2001-0370 Impact factor: 7.271
Fig. 1Proposed workflow of a clinical microbiology laboratory using a CMg approach to identify putative pathogens. Patient presents with illness and a biological specimen is obtained. The specimen is subjected to a targeted-amplicon or shotgun metagenomics sequencing workflow. Targeted-amplicon analysis can be accomplished using OTU-based [53,54] or ASV-based [61] software suites. This includes quality filtering, chimera detection, OTU assignment and taxonomic classification via comparison to reference databases [[57], [58], [59]]. Inferred functionality may also be investigated with software such as PICRUSt [143]. Shotgun metagenomics analysis often includes removal of host-associated reads [144,145], sequence data quality control [41,42], read-based classification [48,49] and/or assembly-based classification [[43], [44], [45], [46]], characterization [117,146,147] and statistical analysis. Clinical interpretation of the analysis identifies the putative pathogen followed by conventional confirmatory testing, and the patient is subsequently administered targeted therapeutics. Dependent on the NGS instrument and with continued analytical improvements, time to results can be achieved between 4 and 60 h.
Fig. 2An analysis of reviewed literature. The list of peer-reviewed literature was collated through iterative searches of the National Center for Biotechnology Information's PubMed database and manual curation (see Supplementary Table S1). The following Medical Subject Headings (MeSH; National Institute of Health's (NIH) National Library of Medicine (NLM) controlled vocabulary used to index articles in PubMed) search terms were used in various combinations: metagenom* [MH]; diagnos* [SH]; humans [MH]; clinical metagenomics [tiab]; diagnostics metagenomics [taib]; infectious disease diagnostics [tiab]; not microbiota [MAJR]; not standards [SH]; not review [PT]; not congresses [PT]; not outbreak [tiab]. A) Number of peer-reviewed scientific publications that have used CMg for diagnostic purposes. Pie-graph inset represents the breakdown of reviewed literature according to infection type for CMg diagnosis. B) Bar plot indicates the sequencing method and study type used.
An analysis of reviewed literature. The list of peer-reviewed literature was collated through iterative searches of the National Center for Biotechnology Information's PubMed database and manual curation (see Supplementary Table S1). The following Medical Subject Headings (MeSH; National Institute of Health's (NIH) National Library of Medicine (NLM) controlled vocabulary used to index articles in PubMed) search terms were used in various combinations: metagenom* [MH]; diagnos* [SH]; humans [MH]; clinical metagenomics [tiab]; diagnostics metagenomics [taib]; infectious disease diagnostics [tiab]; not microbiota [MAJR]; not standards [SH]; not review [PT]; not congresses [PT]; not outbreak [tiab]. A) Number of peer-reviewed scientific publications that have used CMg for diagnostic purposes. Pie-graph inset represents the breakdown of reviewed literature according to infection type for CMg diagnosis. B) Bar plot indicates the sequencing method and study type used.