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Centralised or Localised Pathogen Whole Genome Sequencing: Lessons Learnt From Implementation in a Clinical Diagnostic Laboratory

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.636290

Keywords

centralised; localised; whole genome sequencing; clinical microbiology; pathogen genomics; public health

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Whole genome sequencing (WGS) is widely used in managing microbial outbreaks, but the current model of sending isolates to a central lab for sequencing has limitations. The slow rollout of WGS in clinical labs is due to the need for trained personnel and regulatory requirements. Onsite sequencing has benefits over centralized sequencing, allowing for collaboration with local infection control staff and rapid data analysis to understand transmission chains.
Whole genome sequencing (WGS) has had widespread use in the management of microbial outbreaks in a public health setting. Current models encompass sending isolates to a central laboratory for WGS who then produce a report for various levels of government. This model, although beneficial, has multiple shortcomings especially for localised infection control interventions and patient care. One reason for the slow rollout of WGS in clinical diagnostic laboratories has been the requirement for professionally trained personal in both wet lab techniques and in the analysis and interpretation of data, otherwise known as bioinformatics. A further bottleneck has been establishment of regulations in order to certify clinical and technical validity and demonstrate WGS as a verified diagnostic test. Nevertheless, this technology is far superior providing information that would normally require several diagnostic tests to achieve. An obvious barrier to informed outbreak tracking is turnaround time and requires isolates to be sequenced in real-time to rapidly identify chains of transmission. One way this can be achieved is through onsite hospital sequencing with a cumulative analysis approach employed. Onsite, as opposed to centralised sequencing, has added benefits including the increased agility to combine with local infection control staff to iterate through the data, finding links that aide in understanding transmission chains and inform infection control strategies. Our laboratory has recently instituted a pathogen WGS service within a diagnostic laboratory, separate to a public health laboratory. We describe our experience, address the challenges faced and demonstrate the advantages of de-centralised sequencing through real-life scenarios.

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