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Combined point of care nucleic acid and antibody testing for SARS-CoV-2: a prospective cohort study in suspected moderate to severe COVID-19 disease.
Petra Mlcochova; Dami Collier; Allyson V Ritchie; Sonny M Assennato; Myra Hosmillo; Neha Goel; Bo Meng; Krishna Chatterji; Vivien Mendoza; Nigel Temperton; Leo Kiss; Katarzyna A Ciazyns; Xiaoli Xiong; John AG Briggs; James Nathan; Federica Mescia; Hongyi Zhang; Petros Barmpounakis; Nikos Demeris; Richard Skells; Paul Lyons; John Bradley; Stephen Baker; Jean Pierre Allain; Kenneth GC Smith; Ian Goodfellow; Ravindra K Gupta.
Affiliation
  • Petra Mlcochova; University of Cambridge
  • Dami Collier; UCL
  • Allyson V Ritchie; Diagnostics for the Real World Europe Ltd
  • Sonny M Assennato; DRW
  • Myra Hosmillo; University of Cambridge
  • Neha Goel; University of Cambridge
  • Bo Meng; University of Cambridge
  • Krishna Chatterji; NIHR Cambridge Clinical Research Facility
  • Vivien Mendoza; CUH NHS Trust
  • Nigel Temperton; University of Kent
  • Leo Kiss; Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge
  • Katarzyna A Ciazyns; Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge
  • Xiaoli Xiong; Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology
  • John AG Briggs; Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology
  • James Nathan; University of Cambridge
  • Federica Mescia; University of Cambridge
  • Hongyi Zhang; CUH NHS Trust
  • Petros Barmpounakis; Athens University of Economics and Business
  • Nikos Demeris; Cambridge Clinical Trials Unit-Cancer Theme
  • Richard Skells; Cambridge Clinical Trials Unit-Cancer Theme
  • Paul Lyons; University of Cambridge
  • John Bradley; University of Cambridge
  • Stephen Baker; Cambridge University
  • Jean Pierre Allain; Diagnostics for the Real World EU Ltd
  • Kenneth GC Smith; University of Cambridge
  • Ian Goodfellow; ig299@cam.ac.uk
  • Ravindra K Gupta; University of Cambridge
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-20133157
ABSTRACT
BackgroundRapid COVID-19 diagnosis in hospital is essential for patient management and identification of infectious patients to limit the potential for nosocomial transmission. The diagnosis of infection is complicated by 30-50% of COVID-19 hospital admissions with nose/throat swabs testing negative for SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid, frequently after the first week of illness when SARS-CoV-2 antibody responses become detectable. We assessed the diagnostic accuracy of combined rapid antibody point of care (POC) and nucleic acid assays for suspected COVID-19 disease in the emergency department. MethodsWe developed (i) an in vitro neutralization assay using a lentivirus expressing a genome encoding luciferase and pseudotyped with spike (S) protein and (ii) an ELISA test to detect IgG antibodies to nucleocapsid (N) and S proteins from SARS-CoV-2. We tested two lateral flow rapid fingerprick tests with bands for IgG and IgM. We then prospectively recruited participants with suspected moderate to severe COVID-19 and tested for SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid in a combined nasal/throat swab using the standard laboratory RT-PCR and a validated rapid POC nucleic acid amplification (NAAT) test. Additionally, serum collected at admission was retrospectively tested by in vitro neutralisation, ELISA and the candidate POC antibody tests. We evaluated the performance of the individual and combined rapid POC diagnostic tests against a composite reference standard of neutralisation and standard laboratory based RT-PCR. Results45 participants had specimens tested for nucleic acid in nose/throat swabs as well as stored sera for antibodies. Using the composite reference standard, prevalence of COVID-19 disease was 53.3% (24/45). Median age was 73.5 (IQR 54.0-86.5) years in those with COVID-19 disease by our reference standard and 63.0 (IQR 41.0-72.0) years in those without disease. The overall detection rate by rapid NAAT was 79.2% (95CI 57.8-92.9%), decreasing from 100% (95% CI 65.3-98.6%) in days 1-4 to 50.0% (95% CI 11.8-88.2) for days 9-28 post symptom onset. Correct identification of COVID-19 with combined rapid POC diagnostic tests was 100% (95CI 85.8-100%) with a false positive rate of 5.3-14.3%, driven by POC LFA antibody tests. ConclusionsCombined POC tests have the potential to transform our management of COVID-19, including inflammatory manifestations later in disease where nucleic acid test results are negative. A rapid combined approach will also aid recruitment into clinical trials and in prescribing therapeutics, particularly where potentially harmful immune modulators (including steroids) are used.
License
cc_by_nc
Full text: Available Collection: Preprints Database: medRxiv Type of study: Cohort_studies / Diagnostic study / Experimental_studies / Observational study / Prognostic study Language: English Year: 2020 Document type: Preprint
Full text: Available Collection: Preprints Database: medRxiv Type of study: Cohort_studies / Diagnostic study / Experimental_studies / Observational study / Prognostic study Language: English Year: 2020 Document type: Preprint
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