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Respiratory metagenomics: route to routine service

Jonathan D. Edgeworth

2023Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic demonstrated broad utility of pathogen sequencing with rapid methodological progress alongside global distribution of sequencing infrastructure. This review considers implications for now moving clinical metagenomics into routine service, with respiratory metagenomics as the exemplar use-case. RECENT FINDINGS: Respiratory metagenomic workflows have completed proof-of-concept, providing organism identification and many genotypic antimicrobial resistance determinants from clinical samples in <6 h. This enables rapid escalation or de-escalation of empiric therapy for patient benefit and reducing selection of antimicrobial resistance, with genomic-typing available in the same time-frame. Attention is now focussed on demonstrating clinical, health-economic, accreditation, and regulatory requirements. More fundamentally, pathogen sequencing challenges the traditional culture-orientated time frame of microbiology laboratories, which through automation and centralisation risks becoming increasingly separated from the clinical setting. It presents an alternative future where infection experts are brought together around a single genetic output in an acute timeframe, aligning the microbiology target operating model with the wider human genomic and digital strategy. SUMMARY: Pathogen sequencing is a transformational proposition for microbiology laboratories and their infectious diseases, infection control, and public health partners. Healthcare systems that link output from routine clinical metagenomic sequencing, with pandemic and antimicrobial resistance surveillance, will create valuable tools for protecting their population against future infectious diseases threats.

Topics & Concepts

MetagenomicsMedicinePandemicAntibiotic resistancePopulationInfectious disease (medical specialty)Intensive care medicineBiologyDiseaseCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)MicrobiologyGeneticsEnvironmental healthAntibioticsPathologyGeneGut microbiota and healthAntibiotic Use and ResistanceAntibiotic Resistance in Bacteria
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