Abstract

Pathogen monitoring, detection and removal are essential to public health and outbreak management. Systems are in place for monitoring the microbial load of hospitals and public health facilities with strategies to mitigate pathogen spread. However, no such strategies are in place for ambulances, which are tasked with transporting at-risk individuals in immunocompromised states. As standard culturing techniques require a laboratory setting, and are time consuming and labour intensive, our approach was designed to be portable, inexpensive and easy to use based on the MinION third-generation sequencing platform from Oxford Nanopore Technologies. We developed a transferable sampling-to-analysis pipeline to characterize the microbial community in emergency medical service vehicles. Our approach identified over sixty-eight organisms in ambulances to the genera level, with a proportion of these being connected with health-care associated infections, such as Clostridium spp. and Staphylococcus spp. We also monitored the microbiome of different locations across three ambulances over time, and examined the dynamic community of microorganisms found in emergency medical service vehicles. Observed differences identified hot spots, which may require heightened monitoring and extensive cleaning. Through metagenomics analysis it is also possible to identify how microorganisms spread between patients and colonize an ambulance over time. The sequencing results aid in the development of practices to mitigate disease spread, while also providing a useful tool for outbreak prediction through ongoing analysis of the ambulance microbiome to identify new and emerging pathogens. Overall, this pipeline allows for the tracking and monitoring of pathogenic microorganisms of epidemiological interest, including those related to health-care associated infections.

Highlights

  • The epidemic potential of disease causing microorganisms and the spread of antibiotic resistance continues to pose a serious threat to global health security [1]

  • The rise of multidrug resistance in pathogens linked to health-care associated infections (HAIs), such as Clostridium difficile and Staphylococcus aureus, highlight the importance of pathogen identification and monitoring of antibiotic resistance genes to reduce their impact on disease spread and to combat the rise of antibiotic resistance [4, 5]

  • Between 2008 and 2012 a reported 9% of patients infected with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) died [7]

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Summary

Introduction

The epidemic potential of disease causing microorganisms (pathogens) and the spread of antibiotic resistance continues to pose a serious threat to global health security [1]. Examples of such emergent threats include the bacterial meningitis epidemic in Sub-Saharan Africa [2] and the cholera outbreak in Haiti (2010) [3]. The rise of multidrug resistance in pathogens linked to health-care associated infections (HAIs), such as Clostridium difficile and Staphylococcus aureus, highlight the importance of pathogen identification and monitoring of antibiotic resistance genes to reduce their impact on disease spread and to combat the rise of antibiotic resistance [4, 5]. The cost associated with increased morbidity and mortality stemming from HAIs is significant and must be considered

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