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Metagenomic next-generation sequencing of samples from pediatric febrile illness in Tororo, Uganda
- Ramesh, Akshaya;
- Nakielny, Sara;
- Hsu, Jennifer;
- Kyohere, Mary;
- Byaruhanga, Oswald;
- de Bourcy, Charles;
- Egger, Rebecca;
- Dimitrov, Boris;
- Juan, Yun-Fang;
- Sheu, Jonathan;
- Wang, James;
- Kalantar, Katrina;
- Langelier, Charles;
- Ruel, Theodore;
- Mpimbaza, Arthur;
- Wilson, Michael R;
- Rosenthal, Philip J;
- DeRisi, Joseph L
- Editor(s): Lin, Baochuan
Abstract
Febrile illness is a major burden in African children, and non-malarial causes of fever are uncertain. In this retrospective exploratory study, we used metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) to evaluate serum, nasopharyngeal, and stool specimens from 94 children (aged 2-54 months) with febrile illness admitted to Tororo District Hospital, Uganda. The most common microbes identified were Plasmodium falciparum (51.1% of samples) and parvovirus B19 (4.4%) from serum; human rhinoviruses A and C (40%), respiratory syncytial virus (10%), and human herpesvirus 5 (10%) from nasopharyngeal swabs; and rotavirus A (50% of those with diarrhea) from stool. We also report the near complete genome of a highly divergent orthobunyavirus, tentatively named Nyangole virus, identified from the serum of a child diagnosed with malaria and pneumonia, a Bwamba orthobunyavirus in the nasopharynx of a child with rash and sepsis, and the genomes of two novel human rhinovirus C species. In this retrospective exploratory study, mNGS identified multiple potential pathogens, including 3 new viral species, associated with fever in Ugandan children.
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