Setup, validation, and quality control of a centralized whole-genome-sequencing laboratory: Lessons learned

Catherine Arnold*, Kirstin Edwards, Meeta Desai, Steve Platt, Jonathan Green, David Conway

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Routine use of whole-genome analysis for infectious diseases can be used to enlighten various scenarios pertaining to public health, including identification of microbial pathogens, relating individual cases to an outbreak of infectious disease, establishing an association between an outbreak of food poisoning and a specific food vehicle, inferring drug susceptibility, source tracing of contaminants, and study of variations in the genome that affect pathogenicity/virulence. We describe the setup, validation, and ongoing verification of a centralized whole-genome-sequencing (WGS) laboratory to carry out sequencing for these public health functions for the National Infection Services, Public Health England, in the United Kingdom. The performance characteristics and quality control metrics measured during validation and verification of the entire end-to-end process (accuracy, precision, reproducibility, and repeatability) are described and include information regarding the automated pass and release of data to service users without intervention.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere00261-18
JournalJournal of Clinical Microbiology
Volume56
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2018

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Crown copyright 2018. The government of Australia, Canada

Keywords

  • Infectious disease
  • Public health
  • Quality control
  • Validation
  • WGS

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