Who
The study analyzed 55 clinical sputum samples from Kaohsiung Veterans General Hospital (KSVGH): 51 Mtb-positive samples and 4 Mtb-negative controls. Positive samples included 12 samples sequenced on a Flongle flow cell and 40 samples sequenced on a MinION flow cell, with overlap in the described cohorts as labeled F01–F12, M01–M36, and T01–T03. Samples were categorized by acid-fast staining (AFS) grades, including trace, 1+, 2+, 3+, and 4+. The study also used spike-in sputum experiments with Mtb H37Ra and analyzed 442 publicly available nanopore whole-genome datasets (291 from PRJNA650381 and 151 from PRJEB49093).
What
The study developed a streamlined thermo-protection DNA preparation method, a single-tube 17-plex PCR assay targeting 16 resistance-associated genes, and a Python-based resistance prediction pipeline called ARapidTb for targeted nanopore sequencing directly from clinical sputum. The assay was designed around resistance genes and mutations identified from the WHO mutation catalogue and tbdb/TBProfiler database.
Key findings reported in the text:
- The thermo-protection approach increased mapped Mtb read counts from 6,183 to 32,301 and increased the overall mapped-read percentage from 5.73% to 61.08% in the pilot comparison.
- Average read length increased from 844.2 bp in control samples to 942.6 bp in thermo-protected samples.
- In spike-in experiments, the thermo-protection buffer improved enrichment, and the apparent limit of detection was around 873 CFU/ml for sequencing 12 spike-in samples on a MinION flow cell.
- On the Flongle, 6 clinical samples were correctly predicted as susceptible; the workflow was presented as enabling next-morning AMR prediction, with a reported total run cost of about $200 USD, or less than $35 per sample.
- On the MinION, Mtb was detected in 28 of 36 Mtb-positive samples, and correct AMR predictions were made for 21 of those 28 detected samples using 15-hour reads.
- Among 17 clinical samples with AFS 2+ or above, predictions were described as accurate except for one INH-resistant sample (M03) that was falsely predicted susceptible.
- Using 4-hour MinION reads, correct AMR predictions were still obtained for 13 AFS 2+ or above samples plus one trace sample, supporting same-day reporting in some cases.
- In PRJNA650381, ARapidTb showed 95.8% agreement with phenotypic drug susceptibility testing across 1,417 AMR predictions, outperforming Mykrobe and TBProfiler according to the authors.
- In PRJEB49093, ARapidTb results were described as concordant with prior findings that nanopore-based genotyping aligns well with Illumina-based resistance calls. Across 442 isolates, ARapidTb was reported as comparable to Mykrobe and better than TBProfiler overall.
The authors conclude that this workflow can provide rapid, targeted, sputum-based AMR prediction for tuberculosis, especially in higher-smear samples, while expanding mutation coverage beyond some prior targeted assays.
When
The study duration, enrollment period, and dates of sample collection were not specified. Sequencing analyses were evaluated using 4-hour, 15-hour, 24-hour, and 72-hour run scenarios depending on platform and simulation of laboratory turnaround. Spike-in cultures for CFU validation were incubated for 3–4 weeks.
Where
Clinical samples came from Kaohsiung Veterans General Hospital (KSVGH). The study used NaOH-treated sputum samples from that clinical setting. Public external validation datasets were downloaded from PRJNA650381 and PRJEB49093. The reference genome used for primer design was NC_000962.3.
Why
The rationale was to address the need for faster and broader antimicrobial resistance detection for tuberculosis directly from sputum, without relying on slower culture-based workflows or more limited targeted assays. The authors sought to:
- reduce human DNA contamination during DNA preparation,
- expand coverage of resistance-associated mutations beyond existing assays,
- exploit long-read nanopore sequencing more effectively,
- and enable same-day or next-day AMR prediction from clinical samples.
The study also aimed to improve on earlier assays such as Deeplex-MycTB, “nanopore 2021,” and “nanopore 2023” by covering additional genes and larger targeted regions.
How
This was a diagnostic assay development and evaluation study combining laboratory protocol optimization, clinical sample testing, spike-in analytical validation, and comparative bioinformatics benchmarking.
Methods included:
- Primer design: A panel of 10 full-length genes and 6 partial genes was designed using oli2go with target amplicons of about 1000–5000 bp. The final assay became a 17-plex PCR covering 16 resistance-associated genes.
- Sample preparation: Sputum pellets were treated with a thermo-protection buffer (2 M KCl, 0.025 M HEPES, pH 7.5), heat-inactivated at 99 °C for 30 min, bead-cleaned, and eluted for PCR.
- Pilot comparison: One clinical sample was split into control and thermo-protection workflows to assess enrichment.
- Spike-in testing: Mtb H37Ra was serially diluted into Mtb-negative sputum to assess enrichment and detection limit.
- PCR: Multiplex PCR used Platinum SuperFi II Green PCR Master Mix with 35 cycles.
- Sequencing: Libraries were prepared with the Oxford Nanopore Rapid Barcoding Kit 96, then sequenced on Flongle and MinION R9.4.1 flow cells. Basecalling/demultiplexing used MinKNOW v4.3.4 and Guppy v5.0.11.
- Bioinformatics: Reads were mapped to expected amplicons with Minimap2 v2.26; consensus and variants were generated with Medaka v1.5.0; resistance-associated variants were compiled into Tbresdb from tbdb and the WHO catalogue; AMR prediction was performed with ARapidTb.
- Comparators: ARapidTb was compared against Mykrobe v0.12.1 and TBProfiler v2.3.0 using public nanopore datasets.
Limitations noted in the text
- Clinical drug-resistant samples were limited in number.
- Sensitivity was low for some drugs, particularly PZA and ETH.
- ethA deletions were incompletely represented in the resistance database, contributing to false negatives.
- Nanopore indel characterization issues contributed to false positives in other tools.
- The omission of the gid gene from primer design likely reduced streptomycin resistance detection.
- Performance was best in samples with higher smear grades, indicating limited sensitivity in lower-burden samples.
Level of evidence
This is a diagnostic development and validation study, not a randomized or interventional trial. Its evidence is strongest for technical feasibility and comparative diagnostic performance, but more limited for broad clinical effectiveness because the clinical evaluation sample was relatively small and resistant cases were uncommon.
Source: Dou, H. Y., Huang, T. S., Wu, H. C., Hsu, C. H., Chen, F. J., & Liao, Y. C. (2025). Targeted sputum sequencing for rapid and broad drug resistance of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Infection, 53(4), 1413-1423. https://benangmerah.net/record/31/targeted-sputum-sequencing