Bloodborne infectious agents, including novel / emerging pathogens of concern, pose a continual threat to our blood supply and the safety of the 5 million transfusions performed annually in the United States. Here we propose to apply two state-of-the-art diagnostic technologies, a pan-viral microarray called the Virochip and massively parallel deep sequencing, to comprehensively identify infectious agents in blood. The Virochip will be expanded to cover bloodborne nonviral as well as viral pathogens, and we will rigorously assess analytical test characteristics (e.g. sensitivity, specificity, limits of detection, accuracy) for detection of pathogens associated with the most common bloodborne infections, including malaria, Chagas disease, HIV, hepatitis B/C, and dengue virus. The expanded Virochip and deep sequencing will then be used to launch a broad- spectrum surveillance program for bloodborne infectious agents. We will initially focus on analyzing serum samples from patients with nonA-E clinical hepatitis and deferred blood donors with post-donation acute illness such as fever - samples which carry a high a priori probability of harboring known / novel infectious agents. We will analyze random individual or pooled serum samples from donors matched by age, sex, and geographic location for infectious agents circulating in our blood supply. We will perform whole-genome sequencing and epidemiological screening by serology and PCR for any novel viruses identified in transfused blood. A major goal of this research is to assess the utility of Virochip and deep sequencing as comprehensive pathogen screening tools for ensuring transfusion safety. Identification of novel infectious agents in blood will also spur further detailed investigations into their epidemiology and pathogenicity.
Known as well as novel / emerging infectious agents continually threaten the safety of the 5 million transfusions performed annually in the United States, yet the lack of diagnostic tools able to comprehensively test for bloodborne pathogens or to identify novel / divergent strains has hindered surveillance efforts. This study proposes to investigate the utility of the Virochip, a pan-viral microarray, and massively parallel deep sequencing as complementary strategies for (1) broad-based detection of bloodborne pathogens, and (2) identification of novel / emerging infectious agents. The results from this study have the potential to advance these technologies for eventual FDA approval as broad-based screening tools to ensure transfusion safety, with significant clinical and public health implications. Identification of novel infectious agents in blood will also open up new avenues of research into their epidemiology and the threat that they pose to our blood supply.
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