Special article
Next-Generation Sequencing for Infectious Disease Diagnosis and Management: A Report of the Association for Molecular Pathology

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Next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies are increasingly being used for diagnosis and monitoring of infectious diseases. Herein, we review the application of NGS in clinical microbiology, focusing on genotypic resistance testing, direct detection of unknown disease-associated pathogens in clinical specimens, investigation of microbial population diversity in the human host, and strain typing. We have organized the review into three main sections: i) applications in clinical virology, ii) applications in clinical bacteriology, mycobacteriology, and mycology, and iii) validation, quality control, and maintenance of proficiency. Although NGS holds enormous promise for clinical infectious disease testing, many challenges remain, including automation, standardizing technical protocols and bioinformatics pipelines, improving reference databases, establishing proficiency testing and quality control measures, and reducing cost and turnaround time, all of which would be necessary for widespread adoption of NGS in clinical microbiology laboratories.

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Disclosures: None declared.

This Report is a product of the AMP NGS in ID Work Group, a joint project of the AMP Infectious Diseases Subdivision Leadership and Clinical Practice Committee. The 2014 and 2015 AMP Infectious Diseases Subdivision Leadership consisted of Matthew Bankowski, Linda Cook, Helen Fernandes (2014 Chair), Christine Ginocchio, David Hillyard, Richard Hodinka, Colleen S. Kraft, Marie Louise Landry, Michael Lewinski (2015 Chair), Melissa Miller, Susan M. Novak-Weekley, Benjamin Pinsky, Rangaraj Selvarangan, and Alexandra Valsamakis. The 2014 and 2015 Clinical Practice Committee consisted of Matthew Bankowski, Milena Cankovic, Christopher Coldren, Linda Cook, Jennifer H. Crow, Jennifer Dunlap, Birgit H. Funke, Larissa V. Furtado, Lawrence Jennings, Loren Joseph (2014 Chair), Arivarasan Karunamurthy, Annette Kim, Bryan Krock, Marilyn M. Li, Melissa B. Miller, Marina N. Nikiforova (2015 Chair), Mary Lowery Nordberg, Carolyn Sue Richards, Paul Rothberg, and Somak Roy.

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