| Literature DB >> 36266337 |
Katrina L Kalantar1, Lucile Neyton2, Carolyn S Calfee2, Charles R Langelier3,4, Mazin Abdelghany5, Eran Mick5, Alejandra Jauregui2, Saharai Caldera5, Paula Hayakawa Serpa5, Rajani Ghale2,5, Jack Albright6, Aartik Sarma2, Alexandra Tsitsiklis5, Aleksandra Leligdowicz6, Stephanie A Christenson2, Kathleen Liu7, Kirsten N Kangelaris8, Carolyn Hendrickson5, Pratik Sinha9, Antonio Gomez10, Norma Neff11, Angela Pisco11, Sarah B Doernberg5, Joseph L Derisi11,12, Michael A Matthay2.
Abstract
We carried out integrated host and pathogen metagenomic RNA and DNA next generation sequencing (mNGS) of whole blood (n = 221) and plasma (n = 138) from critically ill patients following hospital admission. We assigned patients into sepsis groups on the basis of clinical and microbiological criteria. From whole-blood gene expression data, we distinguished patients with sepsis from patients with non-infectious systemic inflammatory conditions using a trained bagged support vector machine (bSVM) classifier (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) = 0.81 in the training set; AUC = 0.82 in a held-out validation set). Plasma RNA also yielded a transcriptional signature of sepsis with several genes previously reported as sepsis biomarkers, and a bSVM sepsis diagnostic classifier (AUC = 0.97 training set; AUC = 0.77 validation set). Pathogen detection performance of plasma mNGS varied on the basis of pathogen and site of infection. To improve detection of virus, we developed a secondary transcriptomic classifier (AUC = 0.94 training set; AUC = 0.96 validation set). We combined host and microbial features to develop an integrated sepsis diagnostic model that identified 99% of microbiologically confirmed sepsis cases, and predicted sepsis in 74% of suspected and 89% of indeterminate sepsis cases. In summary, we suggest that integrating host transcriptional profiling and broad-range metagenomic pathogen detection from nucleic acid is a promising tool for sepsis diagnosis.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36266337 DOI: 10.1038/s41564-022-01237-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Microbiol ISSN: 2058-5276 Impact factor: 30.964