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Abstract Objective:Whole genome sequencing (WGS) can help identify transmission of pathogens causing healthcare-associated infections (HAIs). However, the current gold standard of short-read, Illumina-based WGS is labor and time intensive. Given recent improvements in long-read Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) sequencing, we sought to establish a low resource approach providing accurate WGS-pathogen comparison within a time frame allowing for infection prevention and control (IPC) interventions. Methods:WGS was prospectively performed on pathogens at increased risk of potential healthcare transmission using the ONT MinION sequencer with R10.4.1 flow cells and Dorado basecaller. Potential transmission was assessed via Ridom SeqSphere+ for core genome multilocus sequence typing and MINTyper for reference-based core genome single nucleotide polymorphisms using previously published cutoff values. The accuracy of our ONT pipeline was determined relative to Illumina. Results:Over a six-month period, 242 bacterial isolates from 216 patients were sequenced by a single operator. Compared to the Illumina gold standard, our ONT pipeline achieved a mean identity score of Q60 for assembled genomes, even with a coverage rate as low as 40×. The mean time from initiating DNA extraction to complete analysis was 2 days (IQR 2–3.25 days). We identified five potential transmission clusters comprising 21 isolates (8.7% of sequenced strains). Integrating ONT with epidemiological data, >70% (15/21) of putative transmission cluster isolates originated from patients with potential healthcare transmission links. Conclusions:Via a stand-alone ONT pipeline, we detected potentially transmitted HAI pathogens rapidly and accurately, aligning closely with epidemiological data. Our low-resource method has the potential to assist in IPC efforts.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2026
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