International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Oct 2022)

An isothermal lab-on-phone test for easy molecular diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2 near patients and in less than 1 hour

  • Gonçalo Doria,
  • Carla Clemente,
  • Eduardo Coelho,
  • João Colaço,
  • Rui Crespo,
  • Andrei Semikhodskii,
  • Helder Mansinho,
  • Magno Dinis,
  • Maria Fernanda Carvalho,
  • Manuela Casmarrinha,
  • Cátia Samina,
  • Ana Cristina Vidal,
  • Francisca Delarue,
  • Susana Graúdo,
  • Ana Catarina Santos,
  • David Peças,
  • Olga Carreira,
  • Raquel Marques,
  • Carina Gaspar,
  • Orfeu Flores

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 123
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Objectives: The performance of a new point-of-care CE-IVD-marked isothermal lab-on-phone COVID-19 assay was assessed in comparison to a gold standard real-time reverse transcriptase–PCR method. Methods: The study was conducted following a nonprobability sampling of ≥16-year-old volunteers from three different laboratories, using direct mouthwash (N = 24) or nasopharyngeal (N = 191) clinical samples. Results: The assay demonstrated 95.19% sensitivity and 100% specificity for detection of SARS-CoV-2 in direct nasopharyngeal crude samples and 78.95% sensitivity and 100% specificity in direct mouthwash crude samples. It also successfully detected currently predominant SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern (Beta B.1.351, Delta B.1.617.2, and Omicron B.1.1.529) and demonstrated to be inert against potential cross-reactions of other common respiratory pathogens that cause infections that present similar symptoms to COVID-19. Conclusion: This lab-on-phone pocket-sized assay relies on an isothermal amplification of SARS-CoV-2’s N and E genes, taking just 50 minutes from sample to result, with only 2 minutes of hands-on time. It presents good performance when using direct nasopharyngeal crude samples, enabling a low-cost, real-time, rapid, and accurate identification of SARS-CoV-2 infections at the point of care, which is important for both clinical management and population screening, as a tool to break the chain of transmission of COVID-19 pandemic, especially in low-resources environments.

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