Abstract
The standard paradigm for microbiological testing is dependent on the presentation of a patient to a clinician. Tests are then requested based on differential diagnoses using the patient's symptoms as a guide. The era of high-throughput genomic methods has the potential to replace this model for the first time with what could be referred to as "hypothesis-free testing." This approach utilizes one of a variety of methodologies to obtain a sequence from potentially any nucleic acid in a clinical sample, without prior knowledge of its content. We discuss the advantages of such an approach and the challenges in making this a reality.
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Allcock, R. J. N., Jennison, A. V., & Warrilow, D. (2017, November 1). Towards a universal molecular microbiological test. Journal of Clinical Microbiology. American Society for Microbiology. https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM.01155-17
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