Emerging Infectious Diseases (Sep 2013)

Use of Staged Molecular Analysis to Determine Causes of Unexplained Central Nervous System Infections

  • Chien-Chin Hsu,
  • Rafal Tokarz,
  • Thomas Briese,
  • Hung-Chin Tsai,
  • Phenix-Lan Quan,
  • W. Ian Lipkin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1909.130474
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 9
pp. 1470 – 1477

Abstract

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No agent is implicated in most central nervous system (CNS) infections. To investigate cerebrospinal fluid samples from patients with CNS infections of unknown cause in 1 hospital in Taiwan, we used a staged molecular approach, incorporating techniques including multiplex MassTag PCR, 16S rRNA PCR, DNA microarray, and high-throughput pyrosequencing. We determined the infectious agent for 31 (24%) of 131 previously negative samples. Candidate pathogens were identified for 25 (27%) of 94 unexplained meningitis cases and 6 (16%) of 37 unexplained encephalitis cases. Epstein-Barr virus (18 infections) accounted for most of the identified agents in unexplained meningitis cases, followed by Escherichia coli (5), enterovirus (2), human herpesvirus 2 (1), and Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Herpesviruses were identified in samples from patients with unexplained encephalitis cases, including varicella-zoster virus (3 infections), human herpesvirus 1 (2), and cytomegalovirus (1). Our study confirms the power of multiplex MassTag PCR as a rapid diagnostic tool for identifying pathogens causing unexplained CNS infections.

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