Literature Review of Pathogen Agnostic Molecular Testing of Clinical Specimens From Difficult-to-Diagnose Patients: Implications for Public Health.
Diane L DowniePreetika RaoCorinne David-FerdonSean CourtneyJustin S LeeShannon KugleyPia D M MacDonaldKeegan BarnesShelby FisherJoanne L AndreadisJasmine ChaitramMatthew R MauldinReynolds M SalernoJarad SchifferAdi V GundlapalliPublished in: Health security (2024)
To better identify emerging or reemerging pathogens in patients with difficult-to-diagnose infections, it is important to improve access to advanced molecular testing methods. This is particularly relevant for cases where conventional microbiologic testing has been unable to detect the pathogen and the patient's specimens test negative. To assess the availability and utility of such testing for human clinical specimens, a literature review of published biomedical literature was conducted. From a corpus of more than 4,000 articles, a set of 34 reports was reviewed in detail for data on where the testing was being performed, types of clinical specimens tested, pathogen agnostic techniques and methods used, and results in terms of potential pathogens identified. This review assessed the frequency of advanced molecular testing, such as metagenomic next generation sequencing that has been applied to clinical specimens for supporting clinicians in caring for difficult-to-diagnose patients. Specimen types tested were from cerebrospinal fluid, respiratory secretions, and other body tissues and fluids. Publications included case reports and series, and there were several that involved clinical trials, surveillance studies, research programs, or outbreak situations. Testing identified both known human pathogens (sometimes in new sites) and previously unknown human pathogens. During this review, there were no apparent coordinated efforts identified to develop regional or national reports on emerging or reemerging pathogens. Therefore, development of a coordinated sentinel surveillance system that applies advanced molecular methods to clinical specimens which are negative by conventional microbiological diagnostic testing would provide a foundation for systematic characterization of emerging and underdiagnosed pathogens and contribute to national biodefense strategy goals.
Keyphrases
- public health
- endothelial cells
- gram negative
- clinical trial
- case report
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- cerebrospinal fluid
- systematic review
- randomized controlled trial
- palliative care
- prognostic factors
- fine needle aspiration
- magnetic resonance imaging
- multidrug resistant
- magnetic resonance
- gene expression
- single molecule
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- deep learning
- ultrasound guided
- microbial community