AI Article Synopsis

  • Metagenomic sequencing allows for comprehensive detection of pathogens in a single test, making it useful for diagnosing infections of unknown origin, especially in encephalitis cases.
  • This study focused on hematological patients with encephalitis, optimizing a metagenomic sequencing protocol that enhanced viral detection in cerebrospinal fluid samples by up to 10,000 times using capture probes.
  • The research found that 12% of the patients tested had previously undetected viruses, such as BK polyomavirus and Epstein Barr virus, highlighting the potential benefits of metagenomics for early diagnosis in such cases.

Article Abstract

Metagenomic sequencing is a powerful technique that enables detection of the full spectrum of pathogens present in any specimen in a single test. Hence, metagenomics is increasingly being applied for detection of viruses in clinical cases with suspected infections of unknown etiology and a large number of relevant potential causes. This is typically the case in patients presenting with encephalitis, in particular when immunity is impaired by underlying disorders. In this study, viral metagenomics has been applied to a cohort of hematological patients with encephalitis of unknown origin. Because viral loads in cerebrospinal fluid of patients with encephalitis are generally low, the technical performance of a metagenomic sequencing protocol with viral enrichment by capture probes targeting all known vertebrate viral sequences was studied. Subsequently, the optimized viral metagenomics protocol was applied to a cohort of hematological patients with encephalitis of unknown origin. Viral enrichment by capture probes increased the viral sequence read count of metagenomics on cerebrospinal fluid samples 100 - 10.000 fold, compared to unenriched metagenomic sequencing. In five out of 41 (12%) hematological patients with encephalitis, a virus was detected by viral metagenomics which had not been detected by current routine diagnostics. BK polyomavirus, hepatitis E virus, human herpes virus-6 and Epstein Barr virus were identified by this unbiased metagenomic approach. This study demonstrated that hematological patients with encephalitis of unknown origin may benefit from early viral metagenomics testing as a single step approach.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcv.2020.104566DOI Listing

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