Frontiers in Public Health (Oct 2021)

Canine Olfactory Detection of SARS-COV2-Infected Patients: A One Health Approach

  • Rita de Cássia Carvalho Maia,
  • Leucio Câmara Alves,
  • Jeine Emanuele Santos da Silva,
  • François Rémi Czyba,
  • Jorge Antonio Pereira,
  • Vincent Soistier,
  • Clothilde Lecoq Julien,
  • Dominique Grandjean,
  • Anísio Francisco Soares

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2021.647903
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

The aim of the present study is to apply the canine olfactory sensitivity to detect COVID-19-positive axillary sweat samples as a One Health approach in Latin America. One hundred volunteers with COVID-like symptoms were invited to participate, and both axillary sweat samples for dog detection and nasopharynx/oropharynx swabs for qPCR were collected. Two dogs, previously trained, detected 97.4% of the samples positive for COVID-19, including a false-negative qPCR-test, and the positive predictive value was 100% and the negative predictive value was 98.2%. Therefore, we can conclude that canine olfactory sensitivity can detect a person infected with COVID-19 through axillary sweat successfully and could be used as an alternative to screen them without invasive testing.

Keywords