Deciphering Microbiota of Acute Upper Respiratory Infections: A Comparative Analysis of PCR and mNGS Methods for Lower Respiratory Trafficking Potential

Author:

Almas Sadia1ORCID,Carpenter Rob E.12,Singh Anuradha3,Rowan Chase1,Tamrakar Vaibhav K.34ORCID,Sharma Rahul13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Research, Advanta Genetics, 10935 CR 159, Tyler, TX 75703, USA

2. Department of Human Resource Development, University of Texas at Tyler, 3900 University Boulevard, Tyler, TX 75799, USA

3. ICMR-National Institute of Research in Tribal Health, Jabalpur 482003, India

4. RetroBioTech LLC, 838 Dalmalley Ln, Coppell, TX 75019, USA

Abstract

Although it is clinically important for acute respiratory tract (co)infections to have a rapid and accurate diagnosis, it is critical that respiratory medicine understands the advantages of current laboratory methods. In this study, we tested nasopharyngeal samples (n = 29) with a commercially available PCR assay and compared the results with those of a hybridization-capture-based mNGS workflow. Detection criteria for positive PCR samples was Ct < 35 and for mNGS samples it was >40% target coverage, median depth of 1X and RPKM > 10. A high degree of concordance (98.33% PPA and 100% NPA) was recorded. However, mNGS yielded positively 29 additional microorganisms (23 bacteria, 4 viruses, and 2 fungi) beyond PCR. We then characterized the microorganisms of each method into three phenotypic categories using the IDbyDNA Explify® Platform (Illumina® Inc, San Diego, CA, USA) for consideration of infectivity and trafficking potential to the lower respiratory region. The findings are significant for providing a comprehensive yet clinically relevant microbiology profile of acute upper respiratory infection, especially important in immunocompromised or immunocompetent with comorbidity respiratory cases or where traditional syndromic approaches fail to identify pathogenicity. Accordingly, this technology can be used to supplement current syndrome-based tests, and data can quickly and effectively be phenotypically characterized for trafficking potential, clinical (co)infection, and comorbid consideration—with promise to reduce morbidity and mortality.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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