Clinical performance evaluation of a tiling amplicon panel for whole genome sequencing of respiratory syncytial virus
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Accurate genomic characterization of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is crucial for studies of epidemiology and viral evolution, and monitoring potential escape from newly authorized vaccines and antivirals. We adapted a viral whole genome tiling amplicon panel (UW-ARTIC) and developed a custom bioinformatic pipeline for high-throughput, cost-effective sequencing of RSV-A and RSV-B. We established genome acceptability criteria and determined the performance characteristics of the panel including assay sensitivity, specificity, breadth of genome recovery, accuracy, and precision using contrived and remnant clinical specimens. High-quality genomes (>95% genome completeness; >500X and >1000X average depth for whole genome and fusion gene respectively) were recovered from samples with Ct ≤ 30 (~594 and 2,004 copies per reaction for RSV-A and RSV-B respectively). Minor variants were accurately identified in sample mixtures of 5:95 and higher. The assay showed high accuracy when compared against Sanger, shotgun metagenomic, and hybridization capture-based sequencing; and high repeatability and reproducibility. The UW-ARTIC RSV panel has utility in genomic surveillance, clinical and research applications. It has been used to generate FDA-reportable data for clinical trials of RSV antiviral products, with robust performance characteristics in samples from around the globe from as recently as the 2023/24 season. Continued genomic surveillance and future updates to primer sets will be essential for continued recovery of genomes as RSV continues to evolve.