Kashmir Observer

Trained Sniffer Dogs May Accurately Detect Covid Infected Airport Passengers: Study

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Trained sniffer dogs can accurately detect airport passengers infected with SARSCoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, according to a study published in the journal BMJ Global Health. This method of detection is likely to be valuable, not only in the early stages of a pandemic when other resources might not yet be available, but also to help contain an ongoing pandemic, the researcher­s said. A key finding was that the dogs were less successful at correctly identifyin­g the Alpha variant as they had been trained to detect the wild type. This just goes to show how good dogs are at distinguis­hing between different scents, they said.

It is thought that dogs are able to detect distinct volatile organic compounds released during various metabolic processes in the body, including those generated by bacterial, viral, and parasitic infections.

The researcher­s from the University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital, Finland, trained four dogs to sniff out SARSCoV-2 in 2020.

Each of the dogs had previously been trained to sniff out illicit drugs or dangerous goods or cancer.

To test the dogs' detection skills, 420 volunteers provided four skin swab samples each.

The four dogs each sniffed the skin samples from 114 of the volunteers who had tested positive for SARSCoV-2 on a PCR swab test and from 306 who had tested negative.

The samples were randomly presented to each dog over seven trial sessions. The diagnostic accuracy of all samples sniffed was 92 per cent: combined sensitivit­y -- accuracy of detecting those with the infection -- was 92 per cent and combined specificit­y -- accuracy of detecting those without the infection -- was 91 per cent.

Some 28 of the positive samples came from people who had had no symptoms, the researcher­s said. Only one was incorrectl­y identified as negative and two were not sniffed, meaning that 25 of the 28 (just over 89 per cent) were correctly identified as positive: the lack of symptoms did not seem to affect the dogs' performanc­e, they said. The four dogs were then put to work sniffing out 303 incoming passengers at Helsinki-Vantaa Internatio­nal Airport, Finland, between September 2020 and April 2021.

Each passenger also took a PCR swab test.

The PCR and sniffer results matched in 296 out of 303 (98 per cent) of the real-life samples.

The dogs correctly identified the samples as negative in 296 out of 300 (99 per cent) PCR negative swab tests and identified three PCR positive cases as negative, the researcher­s said. After re-evaluation with clinical and serologica­l data, one was judged to be SARS-CoV-2 negative, one SARS-CoV-2 positive, and one a likely post-infectious positive PCR test result, they said. Similarly, the dogs indicated four PCR negative cases as positive.

These were all judged to be SARS-CoV-2 negative. Because the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 among the airport passengers was relatively low (less than 0.5 per cent), 155 samples from people who had tested positive on a PCR swab test were also presented to the dogs.

The dogs correctly identified just under 99 per cent of them as positive.

Had these spike' samples been included in the reallife study, the dogs' performanc­e would have reached a sensitivit­y of 97 per cent and a specificit­y of 99 per cent, the researcher­s said.

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