Authors
Sneha Somasekar, Deanna Lee, Jody Rule, Samia N Naccache, Mars Stone, Michael P Busch, Corron Sanders, William M Lee, Charles Y Chiu
Publication date
2017/10/16
Journal
Clinical Infectious Diseases
Volume
65
Issue
9
Pages
1477-1485
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Background
Twelve percent of all acute liver failure (ALF) cases are of unknown origin, often termed indeterminate. A previously unrecognized hepatotropic virus has been suspected as a potential etiologic agent.
Methods
We compared the performance of metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) with confirmatory nucleic acid testing (NAT) to routine clinical diagnostic testing in detection of known or novel viruses associated with ALF. Serum samples from 204 adult ALF patients collected from 1998 to 2010 as part of a nationwide registry were analyzed. One hundred eighty-seven patients (92%) were classified as indeterminate, while the remaining 17 patients (8%) served as controls, with infections by either hepatitis A virus or hepatitis B virus (HBV), or a noninfectious cause for their ALF.
Results
Eight cases of infection from previously …
Total citations
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