Laboratory-based surveillance in the molecular era:the TYPENED model, a joint data-sharing platform for clinical and public health laboratories

Laboratory-based surveillance, one of the pillars of monitoring infectious disease trends, relies on data produced in clinical and/or public health laboratories. Currently, diagnostic laboratories worldwide submit strains or samples to a relatively small number of reference laboratories for characterisation and typing. However, with the introduction of molecular diagnostic methods and sequencing in most of the larger diagnostic and university hospital centres in high-income countries, the distinction between diagnostic and reference/public health laboratory functions has become less clear-cut.... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Niesters, H G
Rossen, J W
van der Avoort, H
Baas, D
Benschop, K
Claas, E C
Kroneman, A
van Maarseveen, N
Pas, S
van Pelt, W
Rahamat-Langendoen, J C
Schuurman, R
Vennema, H
Verhoef, L
Wolthers, K
Koopmans, Marion
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2013
Reihe/Periodikum: Niesters , H G , Rossen , J W , van der Avoort , H , Baas , D , Benschop , K , Claas , E C , Kroneman , A , van Maarseveen , N , Pas , S , van Pelt , W , Rahamat-Langendoen , J C , Schuurman , R , Vennema , H , Verhoef , L , Wolthers , K & Koopmans , M 2013 , ' Laboratory-based surveillance in the molecular era : the TYPENED model, a joint data-sharing platform for clinical and public health laboratories ' , Eurosurveillance , vol. 18 , no. 4 , 20387 , pp. 51-56 .
Schlagwörter: Clinical Laboratory Information Systems / Communicable Disease Control / Communicable Diseases / Cooperative Behavior / Databases / Nucleic Acid / Enterovirus / Humans / Information Dissemination / Laboratories / Molecular Sequence Data / Netherlands / Pilot Projects / Population Surveillance / Public Health
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29190882
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://hdl.handle.net/11370/49791e69-c912-4ef8-a08d-68e1efa669e2

Laboratory-based surveillance, one of the pillars of monitoring infectious disease trends, relies on data produced in clinical and/or public health laboratories. Currently, diagnostic laboratories worldwide submit strains or samples to a relatively small number of reference laboratories for characterisation and typing. However, with the introduction of molecular diagnostic methods and sequencing in most of the larger diagnostic and university hospital centres in high-income countries, the distinction between diagnostic and reference/public health laboratory functions has become less clear-cut. Given these developments, new ways of networking and data sharing are needed. Assuming that clinical and public health laboratories may be able to use the same data for their own purposes when sequence-based testing and typing are used, we explored ways to develop a collaborative approach and a jointly owned database (TYPENED) in the Netherlands. The rationale was that sequence data - whether produced to support clinical care or for surveillance - can be aggregated to meet both needs. Here we describe the development of the TYPENED approach and supporting infrastructure, and the implementation of a pilot laboratory network sharing enterovirus sequences and metadata.