Abstract

BackgroundChildren affected by infectious diseases may not always have a detectable infectious etiology. Diagnostic uncertainty can lead to prolonged hospitalizations, inappropriately broad or extended courses of antibiotics, invasive diagnostic procedures, and difficulty predicting the clinical course and outcome. Cell-free plasma next-generation sequencing (cfNGS) can identify viral, bacterial, and fungal infections by detecting pathogen DNA in peripheral blood. This testing modality offers the ability to test for many organisms at once in a shotgun metagenomic approach with a rapid turnaround time. We sought to compare the results of cfNGS to conventional diagnostic test results and describe the impact of cfNGS on clinical care in a diverse pediatric population at a large academic children’s hospital.MethodsWe performed a retrospective chart review of hospitalized subjects at a tertiary pediatric hospital to determine the diagnostic yield of cfNGS and its impact on clinical care.ResultsWe describe the clinical application of results from 142 cfNGS tests in the management of 110 subjects over an 8-month study period. In comparison to conventional testing as a reference standard, cfNGS was found to have a positive percent agreement of 89.6% and negative percent agreement of 52.3%. Furthermore, 32.4% of cfNGS results were directly applied to make a clinical change in management.ConclusionsWe demonstrate the clinically utility of cfNGS in the management of acutely ill children. Future studies, both retrospective and prospective, are needed to clarify the optimal indications for testing.

Highlights

  • Children affected by infectious diseases may not always have a detectable infectious etiology

  • A total of 142 discrete Cell-free plasma next-generation sequencing (cfNGS) tests were obtained (18 subjects had more than one cfNGS tests sent during their hospitalization)

  • When comparing cfNGS results to conventional testing, we found that of the 105 positive cfNGS tests, 27 (25.7%) identified the same organism as conventional tests

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Summary

Introduction

Children affected by infectious diseases may not always have a detectable infectious etiology. Cell-free plasma next-generation sequencing (cfNGS) can identify viral, bacterial, and fungal infections by detecting pathogen DNA in peripheral blood This testing modality offers the ability to test for over 1000 organisms at once in a metagenomic approach with a rapid turnaround time of approximately 48 h [1,2,3]. Wilke et al BMC Infectious Diseases (2021) 21:552. This testing modality offers the ability to test for many organisms at once in a shotgun metagenomic approach with a rapid turnaround time. We sought to compare the results of cfNGS to conventional diagnostic test results and describe the impact of cfNGS on clinical care in a diverse pediatric population at a large academic children’s hospital

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