Abstract

BackgroundDiarrheal disease is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality globally, especially in low- and middle-income countries. High-throughput and low-cost approaches to identify etiologic agents are needed to guide public health mitigation. Nanoliter-qPCR (nl-qPCR) is an attractive alternative to more expensive methods yet is nascent in application and without a proof-of-concept among hospitalized patients.MethodsA census-based study was conducted among diarrheal patients admitted at two government hospitals in rural Bangladesh during a diarrheal outbreak period. DNA was extracted from stool samples and assayed by nl-qPCR for common bacterial, protozoan, and helminth enteropathogens as the primary outcome.ResultsA total of 961 patients were enrolled; stool samples were collected from 827 patients. Enteropathogens were detected in 69% of patient samples; More than one enteropathogen was detected in 32%. Enteropathogens most commonly detected were enteroaggregative Escherichia coli (26.0%), Shiga toxin-producing E.coli (18.3%), enterotoxigenic E. coli (15.5% heat stable toxin positive, 2.2% heat labile toxin positive), Shigella spp. (14.8%), and Vibrio cholerae (9.0%). Geospatial analysis revealed that the median number of pathogens per patient and the proportion of cases presenting with severe dehydration were greatest amongst patients residing closest to the study hospitals.”ConclusionsThis study demonstrates a proof-of-concept for nl-qPCR as a high-throughput low-cost method for enteropathogen detection among hospitalized patients.

Highlights

  • 4.5 billion people are impacted by diarrheal disease each year [1]

  • This study demonstrates a proof-of-concept for nl-quantitative PCR (qPCR) as a high-throughput low-cost method for enteropathogen detection among hospitalized patients

  • In the second step we demonstrate a proofof-concept for the detection of a broad panel of bacterial, helminth, and protozoal enteropathogens by nl-qPCR among hospitalized patients seeking hospital care for diarrheal symptoms; several targets are difficult to detect by conventional techniques or less common making cross platform validations less tractable

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Summary

Background

Diarrheal disease is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality globally, especially in lowand middle-income countries. High-throughput and low-cost approaches to identify etiologic agents are needed to guide public health mitigation. Nanoliter-qPCR (nl-qPCR) is an attractive alternative to more expensive methods yet is nascent in application and without a proofof-concept among hospitalized patients

Methods
Results
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