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The bacterial density of clinical rectal swabs is highly variable, correlates with sequencing contamination, and predicts patient risk of extraintestinal infection.

Rishi ChanderrajChristopher A BrownKevin HinkleNicole FalkowskiRobert J WoodsRobert P Dickson
Published in: Microbiome (2022)
The bacterial density of rectal swabs is highly variable, and this variability is of methodological, clinical, and prognostic significance. Microbiome studies using rectal swabs are vulnerable to sequencing contamination and should include appropriate negative sequencing controls. Among hospitalized patients, gut bacterial density is associated with clinical exposures (antibiotics, comorbidities) and independently predicts infection risk. Bacterial density is an important and under-studied feature of gut microbiome community analysis. Video abstract.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • rectal cancer
  • healthcare
  • drinking water
  • health risk
  • case report
  • air pollution
  • human health