4.7 Article

Direct Detection and Identification of Prosthetic Joint Infection Pathogens in Synovial Fluid by Metagenomic Shotgun Sequencing

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JCM.00402-18

Keywords

(molecular) diagnostics; (peri)prosthetic joint infection/joint infection; metagenomics; next-generation sequencing; synovial fluid

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, National Institutes of Health [R01 AR056647]
  2. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health [R01 AI091594, R21 AI125870]
  3. National Institutes of Health [R25 GM075148]
  4. CD Diagnostics
  5. BioFire
  6. Curetis
  7. Merck
  8. Hutchison Biofilm Medical Solutions
  9. Accelerate Diagnostics
  10. Allergan
  11. Medicines Company
  12. Mayo Clinic
  13. ASM
  14. IDSA

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Metagenomic shotgun sequencing has the potential to transform how serious infections are diagnosed by offering universal, culture-free pathogen detection. This may be especially advantageous for microbial diagnosis of prosthetic joint infection (PJI) by synovial fluid analysis since synovial fluid cultures are not universally positive and since synovial fluid is easily obtained preoperatively. We applied a metagenomics-based approach to synovial fluid in an attempt to detect microorganisms in 168 failed total knee arthroplasties. Genus- and species-level analyses of metagenomic sequencing yielded the known pathogen in 74 (90%) and 68 (83%) of the 82 culture-positive PJI analyzed, respectively, with testing of two (2%) and three (4%) samples, respectively, yielding additional pathogens not detected by culture. For the 25 culture-negative PJIs tested, genus- and species-level analyses yielded 19 (76%) and 21 (84%) samples with insignificant findings, respectively, and 6 (24%) and 4 (16%) with potential pathogens detected, respectively. Genus- and species-level analyses of the 60 culture-negative aseptic failure cases yielded 53 (88%) and 56 (93%) cases with insignificant findings and 7 (12%) and 4 (7%) with potential clinically significant organisms detected, respectively. There was one case of aseptic failure with synovial fluid culture growth; metagenomic analysis showed insignificant findings, suggesting possible synovial fluid culture contamination. Metagenomic shotgun sequencing can detect pathogens involved in PJI when applied to synovial fluid and may be particularly useful for culture-negative cases.

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