Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jun 2021)

Rapid Isothermal Amplification for the Buccal Detection SARS-CoV-2 in the Context of Out-Patient COVID-19 Screening

  • Amar Bouam,
  • Jean-Jacques Vincent,
  • Elisabeth Le Glass,
  • Lionel Almeras,
  • Pierre-Yves Levy,
  • Hervé Tissot-Dupont,
  • Jean-Christophe Lagier,
  • Pierre-Edward Fournier,
  • Didier Raoult,
  • Michel Drancourt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10122643
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 12
p. 2643

Abstract

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A commercially available isothermal amplification of SARS-CoV-2 RNA was applied to self-collected saliva samples using dry dental cotton rolls, which were held in the mouth for two minutes. Of 212 tests, isothermal amplification yielded three (0.14%) invalid results, 120 (56.6%) positive results and 89 (42%) negative results. Compared to reference RT-PCR assays routinely performed simultaneously on nasopharyngeal swabs, excluding the three invalid isothermal amplification assays and one RT-PCR invalid assay, these figures indicated that 119/123 (96.7%) samples were positive in both methods and 85/85 samples were negative in both methods. Four positive buccal swabs which were missed by the isothermal amplification, exhibited Ct values of 26–34 in reference RT-PCR assays. Positive isothermal amplification detection was achieved in less than 10 min. Supervision of the self-sampling procedure was key to achieve these performances. These data support the proposal to use the protocol reported in this paper, including supervised buccal self-sampling, to screen people suspected of having COVID-19 at the point of care.

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