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The Challenges of Implementing Next Generation Sequencing Across a Large Healthcare System, and the Molecular Epidemiology and Antibiotic Susceptibilities of Carbapenemase-Producing Bacteria in the Healthcare System of the U.S. Department of Defense

OBJECTIVE: We sought to: 1) provide an overview of the genomic epidemiology of an extensive collection of carbapenemase-producing bacteria (CPB) collected in the U.S. Department of Defense health system; 2) increase awareness of the public availability of the sequences, isolates, and customized anti...

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Autores principales: Lesho, Emil, Clifford, Robert, Onmus-Leone, Fatma, Appalla, Lakshmi, Snesrud, Erik, Kwak, Yoon, Ong, Ana, Maybank, Rosslyn, Waterman, Paige, Rohrbeck, Patricia, Julius, Michael, Roth, Amanda, Martinez, Joshua, Nielsen, Lindsey, Steele, Eric, McGann, Patrick, Hinkle, Mary
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4873006/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27196272
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155770
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author Lesho, Emil
Clifford, Robert
Onmus-Leone, Fatma
Appalla, Lakshmi
Snesrud, Erik
Kwak, Yoon
Ong, Ana
Maybank, Rosslyn
Waterman, Paige
Rohrbeck, Patricia
Julius, Michael
Roth, Amanda
Martinez, Joshua
Nielsen, Lindsey
Steele, Eric
McGann, Patrick
Hinkle, Mary
author_facet Lesho, Emil
Clifford, Robert
Onmus-Leone, Fatma
Appalla, Lakshmi
Snesrud, Erik
Kwak, Yoon
Ong, Ana
Maybank, Rosslyn
Waterman, Paige
Rohrbeck, Patricia
Julius, Michael
Roth, Amanda
Martinez, Joshua
Nielsen, Lindsey
Steele, Eric
McGann, Patrick
Hinkle, Mary
author_sort Lesho, Emil
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: We sought to: 1) provide an overview of the genomic epidemiology of an extensive collection of carbapenemase-producing bacteria (CPB) collected in the U.S. Department of Defense health system; 2) increase awareness of the public availability of the sequences, isolates, and customized antimicrobial resistance database of that system; and 3) illustrate challenges and offer mitigations for implementing next generation sequencing (NGS) across large health systems. DESIGN: Prospective surveillance and system-wide implementation of NGS. SETTING: 288-hospital healthcare network. METHODS: All phenotypically carbapenem resistant bacteria underwent CarbaNP(®) testing and PCR, followed by NGS. Commercial (Newbler and Geneious), on-line (ResFinder), and open-source software (Btrim, FLASh, Bowtie2, an Samtools) were used for assembly, SNP detection and clustering. Laboratory capacity, throughput, and response time were assessed. RESULTS: From 2009 through 2015, 27,000 multidrug-resistant Gram-negative isolates were submitted. 225 contained carbapenemase-encoding genes (most commonly bla(KPC), bla(NDM), and bla(OXA23)). These were found in 15 species from 146 inpatients in 19 facilities. Genetically related CPB were found in more than one hospital. Other clusters or outbreaks were not clonal and involved genetically related plasmids, while some involved several unrelated plasmids. Relatedness depended on the clustering algorithm used. Transmission patterns of plasmids and other mobile genetic elements could not be determined without ultra-long read, single-molecule real-time sequencing. 80% of carbapenem-resistant phenotypes retained susceptibility to aminoglycosides, and 70% retained susceptibility to fluoroquinolones. However, among the CPB-confirmed genotypes, fewer than 25% retained susceptibility to aminoglycosides or fluoroquinolones. CONCLUSION: Although NGS is increasingly acclaimed to revolutionize clinical practice, resource-constrained environments, large or geographically dispersed healthcare networks, and military or government-funded public health laboratories are likely to encounter constraints and challenges as they implement NGS across their health systems. These include lack of standardized definitions and quality control metrics, limitations of short-read sequencing, insufficient bandwidth, and the current limited availability of very expensive and scarcely available sequencing platforms. Possible solutions and mitigations are also proposed.
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spelling pubmed-48730062016-06-09 The Challenges of Implementing Next Generation Sequencing Across a Large Healthcare System, and the Molecular Epidemiology and Antibiotic Susceptibilities of Carbapenemase-Producing Bacteria in the Healthcare System of the U.S. Department of Defense Lesho, Emil Clifford, Robert Onmus-Leone, Fatma Appalla, Lakshmi Snesrud, Erik Kwak, Yoon Ong, Ana Maybank, Rosslyn Waterman, Paige Rohrbeck, Patricia Julius, Michael Roth, Amanda Martinez, Joshua Nielsen, Lindsey Steele, Eric McGann, Patrick Hinkle, Mary PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: We sought to: 1) provide an overview of the genomic epidemiology of an extensive collection of carbapenemase-producing bacteria (CPB) collected in the U.S. Department of Defense health system; 2) increase awareness of the public availability of the sequences, isolates, and customized antimicrobial resistance database of that system; and 3) illustrate challenges and offer mitigations for implementing next generation sequencing (NGS) across large health systems. DESIGN: Prospective surveillance and system-wide implementation of NGS. SETTING: 288-hospital healthcare network. METHODS: All phenotypically carbapenem resistant bacteria underwent CarbaNP(®) testing and PCR, followed by NGS. Commercial (Newbler and Geneious), on-line (ResFinder), and open-source software (Btrim, FLASh, Bowtie2, an Samtools) were used for assembly, SNP detection and clustering. Laboratory capacity, throughput, and response time were assessed. RESULTS: From 2009 through 2015, 27,000 multidrug-resistant Gram-negative isolates were submitted. 225 contained carbapenemase-encoding genes (most commonly bla(KPC), bla(NDM), and bla(OXA23)). These were found in 15 species from 146 inpatients in 19 facilities. Genetically related CPB were found in more than one hospital. Other clusters or outbreaks were not clonal and involved genetically related plasmids, while some involved several unrelated plasmids. Relatedness depended on the clustering algorithm used. Transmission patterns of plasmids and other mobile genetic elements could not be determined without ultra-long read, single-molecule real-time sequencing. 80% of carbapenem-resistant phenotypes retained susceptibility to aminoglycosides, and 70% retained susceptibility to fluoroquinolones. However, among the CPB-confirmed genotypes, fewer than 25% retained susceptibility to aminoglycosides or fluoroquinolones. CONCLUSION: Although NGS is increasingly acclaimed to revolutionize clinical practice, resource-constrained environments, large or geographically dispersed healthcare networks, and military or government-funded public health laboratories are likely to encounter constraints and challenges as they implement NGS across their health systems. These include lack of standardized definitions and quality control metrics, limitations of short-read sequencing, insufficient bandwidth, and the current limited availability of very expensive and scarcely available sequencing platforms. Possible solutions and mitigations are also proposed. Public Library of Science 2016-05-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4873006/ /pubmed/27196272 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155770 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lesho, Emil
Clifford, Robert
Onmus-Leone, Fatma
Appalla, Lakshmi
Snesrud, Erik
Kwak, Yoon
Ong, Ana
Maybank, Rosslyn
Waterman, Paige
Rohrbeck, Patricia
Julius, Michael
Roth, Amanda
Martinez, Joshua
Nielsen, Lindsey
Steele, Eric
McGann, Patrick
Hinkle, Mary
The Challenges of Implementing Next Generation Sequencing Across a Large Healthcare System, and the Molecular Epidemiology and Antibiotic Susceptibilities of Carbapenemase-Producing Bacteria in the Healthcare System of the U.S. Department of Defense
title The Challenges of Implementing Next Generation Sequencing Across a Large Healthcare System, and the Molecular Epidemiology and Antibiotic Susceptibilities of Carbapenemase-Producing Bacteria in the Healthcare System of the U.S. Department of Defense
title_full The Challenges of Implementing Next Generation Sequencing Across a Large Healthcare System, and the Molecular Epidemiology and Antibiotic Susceptibilities of Carbapenemase-Producing Bacteria in the Healthcare System of the U.S. Department of Defense
title_fullStr The Challenges of Implementing Next Generation Sequencing Across a Large Healthcare System, and the Molecular Epidemiology and Antibiotic Susceptibilities of Carbapenemase-Producing Bacteria in the Healthcare System of the U.S. Department of Defense
title_full_unstemmed The Challenges of Implementing Next Generation Sequencing Across a Large Healthcare System, and the Molecular Epidemiology and Antibiotic Susceptibilities of Carbapenemase-Producing Bacteria in the Healthcare System of the U.S. Department of Defense
title_short The Challenges of Implementing Next Generation Sequencing Across a Large Healthcare System, and the Molecular Epidemiology and Antibiotic Susceptibilities of Carbapenemase-Producing Bacteria in the Healthcare System of the U.S. Department of Defense
title_sort challenges of implementing next generation sequencing across a large healthcare system, and the molecular epidemiology and antibiotic susceptibilities of carbapenemase-producing bacteria in the healthcare system of the u.s. department of defense
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4873006/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27196272
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155770
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