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More than the eye can see; shedding new light on SARS-CoV-2 Lateral Flow Device-based immunoassays
Garrit Koller; Alexander P Morrell; Rui Galao; Suzanne Pickering; Eithne MacMahon; Joanna Johnson; Konstantin Ignatyev; Stuart JD Neil; Sherif Elsharkawy; Roland Fleck; Pedro Machado; Owen Addison.
Afiliación
  • Garrit Koller; Kings College London
  • Alexander P Morrell; Kings College London
  • Rui Galao; King's College London
  • Suzanne Pickering; King's College London
  • Eithne MacMahon; Guys and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
  • Joanna Johnson; Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
  • Konstantin Ignatyev; Diamond Light Source
  • Stuart JD Neil; King's College London
  • Sherif Elsharkawy; King's College London
  • Roland Fleck; KCL CUI
  • Pedro Machado; KCL CUI
  • Owen Addison; King's College London
Preprint en Inglés | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-21253048
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ABSTRACT
Containing the global SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has been an unprecedented challenge due to high horizontal transmissivity and asymptomatic carriage rates. Lateral Flow Device (LFD) immunoassays were introduced in late 2020 to detect SARS-CoV-2 infection in asymptomatic or pre-symptomatic individuals rapidly. Whilst LFD technologies have been used for over 60 years, their widespread use as a public health tool during a pandemic is unprecedented. By the end of 2020, data from studies into the efficacy of the LFDs emerged and showed these point-of-care devices to have very high specificity (ability to identify true negatives) but inadequate sensitivity with high false-negative rates. The low sensitivity (<50%) shown in several studies is a critical public health concern, as asymptomatic or pre-symptomatic carriers may wrongly be assumed to be non-infectious, posing a significant risk of further spread in the community. Here we show that the direct visual readout of SARS-CoV-2 LFDs is an inadequate approach to discriminate a potentially infective viral concentration in a bio-sample. We quantified significant immobilized antigen-antibody-label conjugate complexes within the LFDs visually scored as negative using high-sensitivity synchrotron X-ray fluorescence imaging. Correlating quantitative X-ray fluorescence measurements and qRT-PCR determined numbers of viral copies, we identified that negatively scored samples could contain up to 100 PFU (equivalent here to [~]10,000 RNA copies/test). The study demonstrates where the shortcomings arise in many of the current direct-readout SARS-CoV-2 LFDs, namely being a deficiency in the readout as opposed to the potential level of detection of the test, which is orders of magnitude higher. The present findings are of importance, both to public health monitoring during the COVID-19 pandemic and to the rapid refinement of these tools for immediate and future applications.
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Texto completo: Disponible Colección: Preprints Base de datos: medRxiv Tipo de estudio: Estudio diagnóstico / Estudio pronóstico Idioma: Inglés Año: 2021 Tipo del documento: Preprint
Texto completo: Disponible Colección: Preprints Base de datos: medRxiv Tipo de estudio: Estudio diagnóstico / Estudio pronóstico Idioma: Inglés Año: 2021 Tipo del documento: Preprint
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