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About
The purpose of this research study is to evaluate and improve a rapid COVID-19 test. The test is designed to identify people who are most contagious and likely to spread the virus to others. This test will be performed at various locations in the Madison area using a mobile laboratory or standard lab space for processing. Saliva samples can be collected and processed at these locations or participants can self-collect at home and drop their samples off at designated locations for same day processing. Results of potential findings of clinical significance will be communicated to the participants by a physician with appropriate expertise on the study team. Individuals with a potential finding of clinical significance will be encouraged to self-isolate and obtain a diagnostic test at their earliest convenience. No results will be given if the test is negative. If the participant consents, advanced molecular testing such as PCR or viral sequencing can be done and results can be shared via online databases, presentations and publications along with the date, site and county of collection to help facilitate tracking the spread of the virus.
Full description
Virtually all COVID-19 RNA assays require centralized laboratories. Samples collected in locations including public testing sites, workplaces, nursing homes, and residential housing are transported to centralized laboratories for testing, leading to lengthy delays in results reporting. The window of maximal contagiousness is thought to be only a few days, so these delays create the risk of excess transmission. Current testing methods are painful, which encourages testing hesitancy. Rapid, onsite detection of SARS-CoV-2 RNA from non-invasive saliva could overcome these issues and provide a pathway to high-throughput detection of people at the greatest risk of SARS-CoV-2 transmission but the logistics of such a testing program require real-world prototyping.
The investigators have developed a simple test to detect high concentrations of SARS-CoV-2 in saliva with assays that require no specialized equipment and can be completed in one hour. This assay is not diagnostic for SARS-CoV-2; instead, it specifically identifies saliva samples that have high amounts of viral RNA that are correlated with live virus shedding. Many samples that would be identified as SARS-CoV-2 by diagnostic qRT-PCR would be negative with this saliva assay. Conversely, detection of RNA in saliva is a potential finding of clinical significance, so participants with that result will be contacted by a medical professional to discuss potential follow-up with their own health care provider, including a possible independent diagnostic testing.
Because the assay requires no specialized equipment, it can be performed at the site of sample collection using a portable laboratory that fits in the backseat of a car. The prototype testing will take place in a variety of settings that may include parking lots, workplaces, nursing homes and residential housing. Participants will be asked to consent to provide a saliva sample that will be tested for SARS-CoV-2 RNA levels consistent with live virus shedding. The consent document will explicitly state that this is not a diagnostic test for SARS-CoV-2 but that a potential finding of clinical significance should be discussed with a medical professional. Participants can opt-out of receiving any results at the time of consent and can provide samples for the sole purpose of contributing to community surveillance and assay development. Paper consent forms will be reviewed and signed and held by team members in a secure location (locked box at the collection site) until taken back to the AIDS Vaccine Research Laboratory for storage. Participants will then spit into a coded vessel (e.g., cup or tube). Samples should be at least 1ml (~¼ teaspoon) and will be assayed for the presence of SARS-CoV-2 RNA using the aforementioned detection assay; the presence of high concentrations of SARS-CoV-2 RNA is indicated by a colorimetric change from pink to yellow/orange.
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93 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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