LB14. Cerebrospinal Fluid Profiling of the Human Host Response Reveals Species-Specific Enterovirus Biosignatures in Acute Flaccid Myelitis Cases

Open Forum Infectious Diseases(2019)

Cited 0|Views59
No score
Abstract
Abstract Background Since 2014 there have been global biennial outbreaks of acute flaccid myelitis (AFM), a rare but severe “polio-like” illness of as yet-unknown etiology primarily affecting children. Enteroviruses (EVs),, especially EV-D68 and EV-A71, have been implicated in association with AFM cases, but proving causality has been difficult as EVs are rarely isolated from cerebrospinal fluid. In addition, early identification of EV-associated AFM is challenging given that the diagnosis is reliant on potentially subjective clinical and radiological criteria with no specific biomarkers described to date. Methods We leveraged existing and newly generated data from a clinical CSF metagenomic assay for pathogen identification at University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) to interrogate the host response at the transcriptome level by RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq). These transcriptome RNA-Seq data were used to create statistical classification models to discriminate among viral infections that have been linked to AFM, including EV-D68, EV-A71, West Nile virus, and Powassan virus. The dynamic range of CSF cellularity (0 to >106 cells/mL), resulting in varying trancriptome coverage, as well as technical variation across samples required the development and validation of novel normalization techniques. In total, we analyzed ~50 CSF samples split into independent training and test sets. Results We were able to demonstrate a distinct signature of AFM that was able to predict the virus associated with AFM in blinded test samples with >80% accuracy. The key transcriptional features that best discriminated EV-A71 from EV-D68-associated AFM involved protein targeting, viral transcription, viral gene expression, and translation initiation pathways. Conclusion Here we demonstrate a novel approach to diagnosis of AFM that relies on host transcriptional biomarkers from cerebrospinal fluid. In the future, this method might allow earlier diagnosis of AFM to drive appropriate therapies and vaccines and predict patient outcomes, as well as guide research studies on the pathophysiology of EV-associated AFM. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.
More
Translated text
Key words
acute flaccid myelitis cases,cerebrospinal fluid profiling,cerebrospinal fluid,human host response,species-specific
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined