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Development of a Simple, Fast and Portable Recombinase Aided Amplification Assay for 2019-nCoV

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Capital Medical University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

New Coronavirus

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: Recombinase aided amplification (RAA) assay

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04245631
DTXY022

Details and patient eligibility

About

In late December 2019, several local health facilities reported clusters of patients with pneumonia of unknown cause that were epidemiologically linked to a seafood and wet animal wholesale market in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China. It is now confirmed that the etiology of this outbreak is a novel coronavirus, namely, 2019-nCoV. Of critical importance is rapid and simple diagnostic method to be used in clinical settings to timely inform and refine strategies that can prevent, control, and stop the spread of 2019-nCoV. Recombinase aided amplification (RAA) assay is a novel isothermal nucleic acid amplification technique in recent years, which has a variety of the advantages including high specificity and sensitivity, rapid detection (30 min), low cost, low equipment requirements and simple operation. The has successfully detected a variety of pathogens using this technique. To develop a RAA assay for 2019-nCoV with the advantages of high speed, simple operation and low cost, and overcomes the shortcomings of the existing molecular detection methods. The investigators established a real time reverse-transcription RAA (RT-RAA) assay for detection of 2019-nCoV. This assay was performed at 42°C within 30min using a portable real-time fluorescence detector, Recombinant plasmids containing conserved ORF1ab genes was used to analyze the specificity and sensitivity. Clinical specimens from patients who were suspected of being infected with 2019-nCoV were used to evaluate the performance of the assay. In parallel, The investigators also used the commercial RT-qPCR assay kit for 2019-nCoV as a reference.

Full description

In late December 2019, several local health facilities reported clusters of patients with pneumonia of unknown cause that were epidemiologically linked to a seafood and wet animal wholesale market in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China. It is now confirmed that the etiology of this outbreak is a novel coronavirus, namely, 2019-nCoV. Of critical importance is rapid and simple diagnostic method to be used in clinical settings to timely inform and refine strategies that can prevent, control, and stop the spread of 2019-nCoV. Recombinase aided amplification (RAA) assay is a novel isothermal nucleic acid amplification technique in recent years, which has a variety of the advantages including high specificity and sensitivity, rapid detection (30 min), low cost, low equipment requirements and simple operation. The investigators has successfully detected a variety of pathogens using this technique. To develop a RAA assay for 2019-nCoV with the advantages of high speed, simple operation and low cost, and overcomes the shortcomings of the existing molecular detection methods. The investigators established a real time reverse-transcription RAA (RT-RAA) assay for detection of 2019-nCoV. This assay was performed at 42°C within 30min using a portable real-time fluorescence detector, Recombinant plasmids containing conserved ORF1ab genes was used to analyze the specificity and sensitivity. Clinical specimens from patients who were suspected of being infected with 2019-nCoV were used to evaluate the performance of the assay. In parallel, The investigators also used the commercial RT-qPCR assay kit for 2019-nCoV as a reference. Patients who were suspected of being infected with 2019-nCoV in the hospital.

Enrollment

50 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

1 to 90 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

    1. Suspected cases (formerly observed cases)

Meet the following 2 at the same time:

Epidemiological history There was a history of travel or residence in Wuhan within two weeks before the onset of illness; or patients who had had fever from Wuhan with respiratory symptoms within 14 days before the onset of illness, or had clustered onset.

Clinical manifestations

  1. fever;

  2. It has the imaging characteristics of pneumonia mentioned above;

  3. The total number of white blood cells is normal or decreased, or the lymphocyte count is decreased in the early stage of onset.

      1. confirmed cases On the basis of meeting the criteria for suspected cases, sputum, throat swabs, lower respiratory tract secretions, and other specimens were tested by real-time fluorescent RT-PCR for positive nucleic acid detection of new coronavirus; or viral gene sequencing was highly homologous with known new coronaviruses.

Exclusion criteria

    1. Influenza virus, parainfluenza virus, adenovirus, respiratory syncytial virus, rhinovirus, human metapneumovirus, SARS coronavirus, and other known other viral pneumonia;
    1. Mycoplasma pneumoniae, chlamydia pneumonia, and bacterial pneumonia; non-infectious diseases such as vasculitis, dermatomyositis, and organizing pneumonia.

Trial design

50 participants in 1 patient group

RAA assay for 2019-nCoV
Description:
a simple, fast and portable recombinase aided amplification (RAA) assay for 2019-nCoV
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Recombinase aided amplification (RAA) assay

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Yao Xie, Doctor; Xuejun Ma, phD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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