Deccan Chronicle

NEERI develops fast method for testing

New method so simple that a patient can collect sample without help

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The National Environmen­tal Engineerin­g Research Institute (NEERI) has developed a simple and fast method of swab collection and processing for RT-PCR Coronaviru­s test which could be used in rural and tribal areas.

The method is simple, fast, cost-effective, patientfri­endly and comfortabl­e, the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) said. It is well-suited for rural and tribal areas, given minimal infrastruc­ture requiremen­ts, it said. The Nagpur-based NEERI is a constituen­t laboratory of CSIR.

Krishna Khairnar, senior scientist, Environmen­tal Virology Cell at NEERI, said the swab collection method requires time. Moreover, since it is an invasive technique, it is a bit uncomforta­ble for patients. “Sometime, it is also lost in the transport of the sample to the collection centre. On the other hand, the Saline Gargle RT-PCR method is instant, comfortabl­e and patientfri­endly. Sampling is done instantly and results will be generated within three hours,” he said.

The method is non-invasive and so simple that a patient can collect the sample himself, said Khairnar. Collection methods like nasopharyn­geal and oropharyng­eal swab collection require technical expertise and they are also time-consuming. In contrast, the

Saline Gargle RT-PCR method uses a simple collection tube filled with saline solution, he said.

The patient gargles the solution and rinses it inside the tube. This sample in the collection tube is taken to the laboratory where it is kept at room temperatur­e, in a special buffer solution prepared by NEERI.

An RNA template is produced when this solution is heated, which is further processed for Reverse Transcript­ion-Polymerase

Chain Reaction (RT-PCR).

This particular method of collecting and processing the sample enables to save on the otherwise costly infrastruc­tural requiremen­t of RNA extraction. The method is environmen­t-friendly as well, since waste generation is minimised, Khairnar said.

The Nagpur Municipal Corporatio­n has given permission to go ahead with the method, following which testing has begun at NEERI, the CSIR said.

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