STROBE-metagenomics: a STROBE extension statement to guide the reporting of metagenomics studies
Autor
Bharucha, Tehmina
Oeser, Clarissa
Balloux, Francois
Brown, Julianne R
Carbo, Ellen C
Charlett, Andre
Chiu, Charles Y
Claas, Eric C J
Goffau, Marcus C de
Vries, Jutte J C de
Eloit, Marc
Hopkins, Susan
Huggett, Jim F
MacCannell, Duncan
Morfopoulou, Sofia
Nath, Avindra
O’Sullivan, Denise M
Reoma, Lauren B
Shaw, Liam P
Sidorov, Igor
Simner, Patricia J
Tan, Le Van
Thomson, Emma C
Dorp, Lucy van
Wilson, Michael R
Breuer, Judith
Field, Nigel
Institución
Resumen
The term metagenomics refers to the use of sequencing methods to simultaneously identify genomic material from
all organisms present in a sample, with the advantage of greater taxonomic resolution than culture or other methods.
Applications include pathogen detection and discovery, species characterisation, antimicrobial resistance detection,
virulence profiling, and study of the microbiome and microecological factors affecting health. However, metagenomics
involves complex and multistep processes and there are important technical and methodological challenges that
require careful consideration to support valid inference. We co-ordinated a multidisciplinary, international expert
group to establish reporting guidelines that address specimen processing, nucleic acid extraction, sequencing
platforms, bioinformatics considerations, quality assurance, limits of detection, power and sample size, confirmatory
testing, causality criteria, cost, and ethical issues. The guidance recognises that metagenomics research requires
pragmatism and caution in interpretation, and that this field is rapidly evolving.