Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology (Aug 2023)

Utility of clinical metagenomics in diagnosing malignancies in a cohort of patients with Epstein-Barr virus positivity

  • Jieyu Song,
  • Kun Zhu,
  • Xiaojia Wang,
  • Qingluan Yang,
  • Shenglei Yu,
  • Yi Zhang,
  • Zhangfan Fu,
  • Hongyu Wang,
  • Yuanhan Zhao,
  • Ke Lin,
  • Guanmin Yuan,
  • Jingxin Guo,
  • Yingqi Shi,
  • Chao Liu,
  • Jingwen Ai,
  • Haocheng Zhang,
  • Wenhong Zhang,
  • Wenhong Zhang,
  • Wenhong Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2023.1211732
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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BackgroundsDifferentiation between benign and malignant diseases in EBV-positive patients poses a significant challenge due to the lack of efficient diagnostic tools. Metagenomic Next-Generation Sequencing (mNGS) is commonly used to identify pathogens of patients with fevers of unknown-origin (FUO). Recent studies have extended the application of Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) in identifying tumors in body fluids and cerebrospinal fluids. In light of these, we conducted this study to develop and apply metagenomic methods to validate their role in identifying EBV-associated malignant disease.MethodsWe enrolled 29 patients with positive EBV results in the cohort of FUO in the Department of Infectious Diseases of Huashan Hospital affiliated with Fudan University from 2018 to 2019. Upon enrollment, these patients were grouped for benign diseases, CAEBV, and malignant diseases according to their final diagnosis, and CNV analysis was retrospectively performed in 2022 using samples from 2018 to 2019.ResultsAmong the 29 patients. 16 of them were diagnosed with benign diseases, 3 patients were diagnosed with CAEBV and 10 patients were with malignant diseases. 29 blood samples from 29 patients were tested for mNGS. Among all 10 patients with malignant diagnosis, CNV analysis suggested neoplasms in 9 patients. Of all 19 patients with benign or CAEBV diagnosis, 2 patients showed abnormal CNV results. The sensitivity and specificity of CNV analysis for the identification for tumors were 90% and 89.5%, separately.ConclusionsThe application of mNGS could assist in the identification of microbial infection and malignancies in EBV-related diseases. Our results demonstrate that CNV detection through mNGS is faster compared to conventional oncology tests. Moreover, the convenient collection of peripheral blood samples adds to the advantages of this approach.

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