Integration of genomic and clinical data augments surveillance of healthcare-acquired infections

Author:

Ward Doyle V.ORCID,Hoss Andrew G.,Kolde Raivo,van Aggelen Helen C.,Loving Joshua,Smith Stephen A.,Mack Deborah A.,Kathirvel Raja,Halperin Jeffery A.,Buell Douglas J.,Wong Brian E.,Ashworth Judy L.,Fortunato-Habib Mary M.,Xu Liyi,Barton Bruce A.,Lazar Peter,Carmona Juan J.,Mathew Jomol,Salgo Ivan S.,Gross Brian D.,Ellison Richard T.

Abstract

AbstractBackground:Determining infectious cross-transmission events in healthcare settings involves manual surveillance of case clusters by infection control personnel, followed by strain typing of clinical/environmental isolates suspected in said clusters. Recent advances in genomic sequencing and cloud computing now allow for the rapid molecular typing of infecting isolates.Objective:To facilitate rapid recognition of transmission clusters, we aimed to assess infection control surveillance using whole-genome sequencing (WGS) of microbial pathogens to identify cross-transmission events for epidemiologic review.Methods:Clinical isolates ofStaphylococcus aureus,Enterococcus faecium,Pseudomonas aeruginosa, andKlebsiella pneumoniaewere obtained prospectively at an academic medical center, from September 1, 2016, to September 30, 2017. Isolate genomes were sequenced, followed by single-nucleotide variant analysis; a cloud-computing platform was used for whole-genome sequence analysis and cluster identification.Results:Most strains of the 4 studied pathogens were unrelated, and 34 potential transmission clusters were present. The characteristics of the potential clusters were complex and likely not identifiable by traditional surveillance alone. Notably, only 1 cluster had been suspected by routine manual surveillance.Conclusions:Our work supports the assertion that integration of genomic and clinical epidemiologic data can augment infection control surveillance for both the identification of cross-transmission events and the inclusion of missed and exclusion of misidentified outbreaks (ie, false alarms). The integration of clinical data is essential to prioritize suspect clusters for investigation, and for existing infections, a timely review of both the clinical and WGS results can hold promise to reduce HAIs. A richer understanding of cross-transmission events within healthcare settings will require the expansion of current surveillance approaches.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Epidemiology

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