1 / 40

Battling Bugs: Inroads in infectious Diseases

Battling Bugs: Inroads in infectious Diseases . UW Mini-Medical School Brad T. Cookson M.D., Ph.D. February 11, 2014. Fever: the Host responds.

liseli
Download Presentation

Battling Bugs: Inroads in infectious Diseases

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Battling Bugs: Inroads in infectious Diseases UW Mini-Medical School Brad T. Cookson M.D., Ph.D. February 11, 2014

  2. Fever: the Host responds “Humanity has but three great enemies: fever, famine and war; of these by far the greatest, by far the most terrible, is fever.”Sir William Osler, 1896

  3. “Houston, we’ve had a problem.”

  4. “Houston, we’ve had a problem.” Four Leading Causes of Morbidity and Mortality: • Heart Disease • Stroke • Cancer • Infection

  5. Diagnosis: key to effective treatment Diagnosis. The determination of the nature of a disease. [G. a deciding] SYN: diacrisis. DiacrisisSYN: diagnosis[G. dia-, through, + krisis, a judgment]

  6. Diagnosis: key to effective treatment “Listen to your patient, he is telling you the diagnosis.” Sir William Osler (1849 – 1919)

  7. Diagnosis: a scientific approach Hypothesis testing: • History • Physical Exam • (imaging) • Laboratory Testing (Laboratory Medicine)

  8. Department of Laboratory Medicine • Chemistry • Hematology • Transfusion Medicine • Immunology • Microbiology • Virology • Medical Informatics • Molecular Diagnosis Program (Molecular Microbiology Laboratory)

  9. Department of Laboratory Medicine Google: UW Medical Laboratory Science • Chemistry • Hematology • Transfusion Medicine • Immunology • Microbiology • Virology • Medical Informatics • Molecular Diagnosis Program (Molecular Microbiology Laboratory)

  10. Identify etiological agents Determine the nature of disease: • Predict course and potential outcome(s) of infection • Tailor therapy • Exclude non-infectious cause(s) of symptoms

  11. Identify etiological agents Determine the nature of disease: • Predict course and potential outcome(s) of infection • Tailor therapy • Exclude non-infectious cause(s) of symptoms What you can’t see, can kill you!

  12. Traditional approach • If it grows, it can usually be identified

  13. Traditional approach • If it grows, it can usually be identified • Acquire patient specimen • blood, urine, CSF • Microscopic examination

  14. Traditional approach • If it grows, it can usually be identified • Acquire patient specimen • blood, urine, CSF • Microscopic examination • Isolate • Amplify

  15. isolate & amplify

  16. isolate & 109 amplification (Google: Scale of universe; Powers of Ten)

  17. Identify etiological agents Phenotype • Identification • Antibiotic resistance (physical expression of genotype) Gene products (proteins, enzymes, complex structures)

  18. Identify etiological agents Phenotype • Identification • Antibiotic resistance (physical expression of genotype) Gene products (proteins, enzymes, complex structures) Genotype (blueprint for phenotype)

  19. Traditional approach • If it grows, it can usually be identified What if… • it grows very slowly? • it does not grow in the lab? • it has disguised usual characteristics? • it has neverbeen seenbefore?

  20. Traditional approach • If it grows, it can usually be identified What if… • it grows very slowly? • it does not grow in the lab? • it has disguised usual characteristics? • it has neverbeen seenbefore? • Ifit grows, it can usuallybe identified

  21. Identify etiological agents Phenotype • Identification • Antibiotic resistance (physical expression of genotype) Gene products (proteins, enzymes, complex structures) Genotype (blueprint for phenotype)

  22. Genomic approach: isolate & amplify Target: Species-identifying DNA sequences flanked by conserved primer binding sites

  23. Genomic approach: isolate & amplify Target: Species-identifying DNA sequences flanked by conserved primer binding sites

  24. Case 1 • 79-yr-old male • Soft-tissue excision • Inflammatory tissue • No microbial elements • Cultures were negative

  25. Case 1 “The differential diagnosis includes: • infectious process (possible _______ infection), • inflammatory process such as rheumatoid nodule or a • neoplastic process (epithelioidcarcinoma can present with foci of necrosis, however the histopathological features do not favor same).” • PCR and DNA sequencing were performed on a PET specimen.

  26. Case 2 23-yr-old man with refractory seizures MRI: Vasogenic edema Gadolinium enhancing

  27. Case 2 • Exhaustive serological testing was negative • Cultures were negative • Surgically excised lesion • Mixed inflammatory cell infiltrate without presence of microbial elements • PCR and DNA sequencing were performed on a fresh surgical specimen.

  28. Case 3 • Young person with AML • Lymph node biopsy • Cultures negative PCR and DNA sequencing were performed.

  29. Genomic approach: isolate & amplify Target: Species-identifying DNA sequences flanked by conserved primer binding sites

  30. Genomic approach: isolate & amplify What if… • infection occurs at a site with normal microbiota? • more than one pathogen is present? Target: Species-identifying DNA sequences flanked by conserved primer binding sites

  31. Normal microbiota

  32. Polymicrobial infection Clin. Microbiol. Rev. 2012, 25(1):193.

  33. Next Generation Sequencing Dr. Toby Russell, assisted by Dr. Beverly Crusher, 2368. Genitronic replication of Worf’s new spinal column, Episode #115, Star Trek, The Next Generation “Sequencing the genome at 109 base pairs per second…”

  34. NGS: isolate & amplify • Capture single DNA molecules • Cluster formation: amplify ~1,000 copies • Parallel DNA sequencing of clusters • Read millions of clusters per flow cell!

  35. Bacterial vaginosis

  36. Cystic fibrosis

  37. case • 35-yr-old male with meningitis • Found to have brain abscess • CSF cultures were negative • Traditional PCR + DNA sequencing revealed polymicrobial infection

  38. case • 35-yr-old male with meningitis • Found to have brain abscess • CSF cultures were negative • Traditional PCR + DNA sequencing revealed polymicrobial infection • Next Generation Sequencing was performed • Antibiotic regimen was optimized

  39. Molecular microbiology laboratory Mission Support delivery of the best possible patient care by providing excellence in the laboratory science of diagnosing infectious diseases.

  40. Google: UW Molecular Microbiology

More Related