Herberg Jethro A, Kaforou Myrsini, Wright Victoria J, Shailes Hannah, Eleftherohorinou Hariklia, Hoggart Clive J, Cebey-López Miriam, Carter Michael J, Janes Victoria A, Gormley Stuart, Shimizu Chisato, Tremoulet Adriana H, Barendregt Anouk M, Salas Antonio, Kanegaye John, Pollard Andrew J, Faust Saul N, Patel Sanjay, Kuijpers Taco, Martinón-Torres Federico, Burns Jane C, Coin Lachlan J M, Levin Michael
Section of Paediatrics, Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
Translational Paediatrics and Infectious Diseases Section, Department of Paediatrics, Hospital Clínico Universitario de Santiago, Santiago de Compostela, Galicia, Spain3Grupo de Investigación en Genética, Vacunas, Infecciones y Pediatría (GENVIP), Healthcare Research Institute of Santiago de Compostela and Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Spain.
JAMA. 2016;316(8):835-45. doi: 10.1001/jama.2016.11236.
Because clinical features do not reliably distinguish bacterial from viral infection, many children worldwide receive unnecessary antibiotic treatment, while bacterial infection is missed in others.
To identify a blood RNA expression signature that distinguishes bacterial from viral infection in febrile children.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Febrile children presenting to participating hospitals in the United Kingdom, Spain, the Netherlands, and the United States between 2009-2013 were prospectively recruited, comprising a discovery group and validation group. Each group was classified after microbiological investigation as having definite bacterial infection, definite viral infection, or indeterminate infection. RNA expression signatures distinguishing definite bacterial from viral infection were identified in the discovery group and diagnostic performance assessed in the validation group. Additional validation was undertaken in separate studies of children with meningococcal disease (n = 24) and inflammatory diseases (n = 48) and on published gene expression datasets.
A 2-transcript RNA expression signature distinguishing bacterial infection from viral infection was evaluated against clinical and microbiological diagnosis.
Definite bacterial and viral infection was confirmed by culture or molecular detection of the pathogens. Performance of the RNA signature was evaluated in the definite bacterial and viral group and in the indeterminate infection group.
The discovery group of 240 children (median age, 19 months; 62% male) included 52 with definite bacterial infection, of whom 36 (69%) required intensive care, and 92 with definite viral infection, of whom 32 (35%) required intensive care. Ninety-six children had indeterminate infection. Analysis of RNA expression data identified a 38-transcript signature distinguishing bacterial from viral infection. A smaller (2-transcript) signature (FAM89A and IFI44L) was identified by removing highly correlated transcripts. When this 2-transcript signature was implemented as a disease risk score in the validation group (130 children, with 23 definite bacterial, 28 definite viral, and 79 indeterminate infections; median age, 17 months; 57% male), all 23 patients with microbiologically confirmed definite bacterial infection were classified as bacterial (sensitivity, 100% [95% CI, 100%-100%]) and 27 of 28 patients with definite viral infection were classified as viral (specificity, 96.4% [95% CI, 89.3%-100%]). When applied to additional validation datasets from patients with meningococcal and inflammatory diseases, bacterial infection was identified with a sensitivity of 91.7% (95% CI, 79.2%-100%) and 90.0% (95% CI, 70.0%-100%), respectively, and with specificity of 96.0% (95% CI, 88.0%-100%) and 95.8% (95% CI, 89.6%-100%). Of the children in the indeterminate groups, 46.3% (63/136) were classified as having bacterial infection, although 94.9% (129/136) received antibiotic treatment.
This study provides preliminary data regarding test accuracy of a 2-transcript host RNA signature discriminating bacterial from viral infection in febrile children. Further studies are needed in diverse groups of patients to assess accuracy and clinical utility of this test in different clinical settings.
由于临床特征无法可靠地区分细菌感染和病毒感染,全球许多儿童接受了不必要的抗生素治疗,而其他儿童则漏诊了细菌感染。
识别一种血液RNA表达特征,以区分发热儿童的细菌感染和病毒感染。
设计、地点和参与者:前瞻性招募了2009年至2013年间在英国、西班牙、荷兰和美国参与研究的医院就诊的发热儿童,分为发现组和验证组。每组在进行微生物学调查后被分类为确诊细菌感染、确诊病毒感染或不确定感染。在发现组中识别区分确诊细菌感染和病毒感染的RNA表达特征,并在验证组中评估诊断性能。在对患有脑膜炎球菌病(n = 24)和炎症性疾病(n = 48)的儿童的单独研究以及已发表的基因表达数据集中进行了额外验证。
针对临床和微生物学诊断,评估一种区分细菌感染和病毒感染的双转录本RNA表达特征。
通过病原体培养或分子检测确认确诊细菌和病毒感染。在确诊细菌组、确诊病毒组和不确定感染组中评估RNA特征的性能。
发现组的240名儿童(中位年龄19个月;62%为男性)中,52名确诊为细菌感染,其中36名(69%)需要重症监护;92名确诊为病毒感染,其中32名(35%)需要重症监护。96名儿童感染情况不确定。对RNA表达数据的分析确定了一种区分细菌感染和病毒感染的38转录本特征。通过去除高度相关的转录本,确定了一个较小的(双转录本)特征(FAM89A和IFI44L)。当在验证组(130名儿童,其中23名确诊细菌感染、28名确诊病毒感染、79名感染情况不确定;中位年龄17个月;57%为男性)中将此双转录本特征用作疾病风险评分时,所有23名经微生物学确诊为细菌感染的患者均被分类为细菌感染(敏感性100% [95% CI,100% - 100%]),28名确诊病毒感染的患者中有27名被分类为病毒感染(特异性96.4% [95% CI,89.3% - 100%])。当应用于来自患有脑膜炎球菌病和炎症性疾病患者的额外验证数据集时,识别细菌感染的敏感性分别为91.7%(95% CI,79.2% - 100%)和90.0%(95% CI,70.0% - 100%),特异性分别为96.0%(95% CI,88.0% - 100%)和95.8%(95% CI,89.6% - 100%)。在感染情况不确定组的儿童中,46.3%(63/136)被分类为细菌感染,尽管94.9%(129/136)接受了抗生素治疗。
本研究提供了关于一种双转录本宿主RNA特征区分发热儿童细菌感染和病毒感染的检测准确性的初步数据。需要在不同患者群体中进行进一步研究,以评估该检测在不同临床环境中的准确性和临床实用性。