Validation of an Automated, End-to-End Metagenomic Sequencing Assay for Agnostic Detection of Respiratory Viruses

Author:

Gauthier Nick P G1ORCID,Chan Wilson2,Locher Kerstin34ORCID,Smailus Duane5ORCID,Coope Robin5ORCID,Charles Marthe34ORCID,Jassem Agatha6ORCID,Kopetzky Jennifer6,Chorlton Samuel D7ORCID,Manges Amee R26ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of British Columbia , Vancouver, British Columbia , Canada

2. School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia , Vancouver, British Columbia , Canada

3. Division of Medical Microbiology, Vancouver General Hospital , Vancouver, British Columbia , Canada

4. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of British Columbia , Vancouver, British Columbia , Canada

5. Canada’s Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre at BC Cancer , Vancouver, British Columbia , Canada

6. British Columbia Centre for Disease Control , Vancouver, British Columbia , Canada

7. BugSeq Bioinformatics Inc , Vancouver, British Columbia , Canada

Abstract

Abstract Background Current molecular diagnostics are limited in the number and type of detectable pathogens. Metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) is an emerging, and increasingly feasible, pathogen-agnostic diagnostic approach. Translational barriers prohibit the widespread adoption of this technology in clinical laboratories. We validate an end-to-end mNGS assay for detection of respiratory viruses. Our assay is optimized to reduce turnaround time, lower cost per sample, increase throughput, and deploy secure and actionable bioinformatic results. Methods We validated our assay using residual nasopharyngeal swab specimens from Vancouver General Hospital (n = 359), which were reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction positive, or negative for influenza, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, and respiratory syncytial virus. We quantified sample stability, assay precision, the effect of background nucleic acid levels, and analytical limits of detection. Diagnostic performance metrics were estimated. Results We report that our mNGS assay is highly precise and semiquantitative, with analytical limits of detection ranging from 103 to 104 copies/mL. Our assay is highly specific (100%) and sensitive (61.9% overall: 86.8%; reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction cycle threshold < 30). Multiplexing capabilities enable processing of up to 55 specimens simultaneously on an Oxford Nanopore GridION device, with results reported within 12 hours. Conclusions This study report outlines the diagnostic performance and feasibility of mNGS for respiratory viral diagnostics, infection control, and public health surveillance. We addressed translational barriers to widespread mNGS adoption.

Funder

Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority

Department of Health and Human Services

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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