使用鸟枪宏基因组测序和克隆分析检测粪便微生物群移植相关感染传播

Emma Briars, Mohamad Sater, Nicole Billings, Ian Herriott, Emily MacLeod, Miriam Huntley
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摘要

背景:粪便微生物群移植(FMT)是一种广泛使用的安全有效的治疗复发性艰难梭菌感染的方式,并且FMT正在探索治疗其他适应症,包括胃肠道疾病和神经系统疾病。尽管像FMT这样基于微生物群的治疗采用严格的供体筛选程序,但这些程序在分辨率和范围上都是有限的,并且仍然存在从供体粪便向FMT受体传播FMT相关感染因子的风险。至关重要的是,这些健康问题导致FDA发布了2019年与FMT相关的传播风险安全警报,并更新了其筛查和报告指南。在疑似传播事件中,感染源存在不确定性;因此,需要快速确定患者感染是否与供体粪便产品有关的方法。方法:在这里,我们在clia认证的实验室中开发了实验室服务测序和生物信息学管道,通过测量基因组相关性来调查疑似FMT感染传播。我们的产品线对宏基因组样本进行深度测序,对来自相关患者感染的分离物进行全基因组测序(WGS),并使用基于snp的分析确定两者之间的基因组相关性。合成宏基因组样品与临床相关分离菌株的不同丰度的WGS一起在计算机上验证了该工作流程。结果:样本和测序库制备工作流程在一组宏基因组和模拟粪便微生物组样本中进行了优化,展示了宏基因组样本的可重复性和低偏倚测序。我们的管道显示出高灵敏度和特异性克隆呼叫,当一个加尖的分离基因组达到5倍深度的基因组的50%。我们还证明了丰度率和测序深度之间的相互作用,以确定检测的克隆极限。结论:总的来说,我们的产品线代表了一种新的方法,可以支持FMT和其他基于微生物群的治疗的临床努力。参考资料:美国食品和药物管理局。关于使用粪便微生物群进行移植的重要安全警告,以及由于多重耐药微生物传播而产生严重不良反应的风险。洛克维尔,马里兰州:食品和药物管理局,2019年。DeFilipp Z, Bloom PP, Torres Soto M,等。粪便菌群移植传播的耐药大肠杆菌血症。中华检验医学杂志,2019;31(1):444 - 444。财政支持:本研究由Day Zero Diagnostics资助。披露:没有
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Detecting fecal microbiota transplantation–associated infection transmission using shotgun metagenomic sequencing and clonality analysis
Background: Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is a widely used modality for safe and effective treatment of recurrent Clostridium difficile infections, and FMT is being explored for the treatment of additional indications including gastrointestinal diseases and neurological disorders. Although microbiota-based therapies like FMT utilize rigorous donor screening procedures, these procedures are limited in resolution and scope, and there remains a risk of transmission of FMT-associated infectious agents from donor stool to a FMT recipient. Critically, these health concerns led the FDA to issue a 2019 safety alert for the transmission risks associated with FMT and to update its guidelines for screening and reporting. In a suspected transmission event, there is uncertainty around the source of infection; thus, methods are needed to rapidly determine whether a patient’s infection is linked to the donor stool product. Methods: Here, we developed a laboratory service sequencing and bioinformatics pipeline within our CLIA-certified laboratory for investigating suspected FMT infection transmission by measuring genomic relatedness. Our pipeline performs deep sequencing of a metagenomic sample, whole-genome sequencing (WGS) of an isolate derived from the implicated patient infection and determines the genomic relatedness between the 2 using a SNP-based analysis. The workflow was validated in silico with synthetic metagenomic samples spiked-in with WGS of clinically relevant isolate strains at varying abundance. Results: The sample and sequencing library preparation workflow was optimized across a panel of metagenomic and mock fecal microbiome samples demonstrating reproducible and reduced-bias sequencing of metagenomic samples. Our pipeline demonstrates high sensitivity and specificity for clonality calls when a spiked in isolate genome achieves 5× depth for >50% of the genome. We also demonstrated an interplay between abundance rate and sequencing depth for determining a clonality limit of detection. Conclusions: Taken together, our pipeline represents a new method that can support the clinical efforts of FMT and other microbiota-based therapies. References: US Food and Drug Administration. Important safety alert regarding use of fecal microbiota for transplantation and risk of serious adverse reactions due to transmission of multidrug-resistant organisms. Rockville, MD: Food and Drug Administration, 2019. DeFilipp Z, Bloom PP, Torres Soto M, et al. Drug-resistant E. coli bacteremia transmitted by fecal microbiota transplant. N Engl J Med 2019;381:2043–2050. Financial support: This study was funded by Day Zero Diagnostics. Disclosures: None
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