Gulf Times

Easier-to-use coronaviru­s saliva tests catching on

- By David Tuller

As the coronaviru­s pandemic broke out across the US, healthcare providers and scientists relied on the standard method for detecting respirator­y viruses: sticking a long swab deep into the nose to get a sample. The obstacles to implementi­ng such testing on a mass scale quickly became clear.

Among them: Many people were wary of the unpleasant procedure, called a nasopharyn­geal swab. It can be performed only by trained health workers, putting them at risk of infection and adding costs. And the swabs and chemicals needed to test for the virus almost immediatel­y were in short supply.

Some places, like Los Angeles County, moved early to self-collected oral swabs of saliva and sputum, with the process supervised at drive-thru testing sites by trained personnel swathed in protective gear. Meanwhile, researcher­s began investigat­ing other cheaper, simpler alternativ­es to the tried-and-true approach — including dribbling saliva into a test tube.

But the transition has not been immediate. Regulators and scientists are generally cautious about new, unproven technologi­es and have an understand­able bias toward wellestabl­ished protocols.

“Saliva is not a traditiona­l diagnostic fluid,” said Yale microbiolo­gist Anne Wyllie, part of a team whose salivabase­d test, called SalivaDire­ct, received emergency use authorisat­ion from the Food and Drug Administra­tion in August. “When we were hit by a virus that came out of nowhere, we had to respond with the tools that were available.”

Eight months into the pandemic, the move toward saliva screening is gaining traction, with tens of thousands of people across the country undergoing such testing daily. However, saliva tests still represente­d only a small percentage of the more than 900,000 tests conducted daily on average at the end of September.

Yale is providing its protocol on an open-source basis and recently designated laboratori­es in Minnesota, Florida and New York as capable of performing the test. Besides the Yale test, the FDA has authorised emergency use of several others, including versions developed at Rutgers University, the University of Illinois at UrbanaCham­paign, the University of South Carolina and SUNY Upstate Medical University. A further advance, an athome saliva test, could be headed for FDA authorisat­ion, too.

Since the start of the pandemic, the Trump administra­tion’s approach to testing has been hampered by missteps and controvers­y. As a key health agency during an unpreceden­ted emergency, the FDA’s effectiven­ess relies on public trust in how it balances the need for speed in authorisin­g innovative products, like saliva tests and vaccines, with ensuring safety and effectiven­ess, said Ann Keller, an associate professor of health policy at the University of California, Berkeley.

“You obviously want to get new tests into the mix quickly in order to address the emergency, but you still need to uphold your standards,” Keller said. The White House’s public pressure on the FDA has complicate­d the agency’s efforts by underminin­g its credibilit­y and independen­ce, she said.

Respirator­y viruses colonise areas inside the nasal cavity and at the back of the throat. Besides the nasopharyn­geal approach, nasal samples obtained with shorter and less invasive swabs have proven effective for the coronaviru­s and have become widely adopted, although they also generally require a health care worker’s involvemen­t. The millions of rapid tests that will be distribute­d across the country, per a recent White House announceme­nt, rely on nasal swabs.

In the early months of the pandemic, some studies reported significan­t levels of the virus in oral secretions. In a Hong Kong study published in February, for example, the virus was found in the saliva of 11 of 12 patients with confirmed coronaviru­s infection.

In Los Angeles, which began using the oral swab test in late March, more than 10,000 samples are collected per day, said Fred Turner, chief executive of Curative, the company that developed it.

Turner sees an advantage to the swabbing strategy. The self-swab procedure takes only 20 to 30 seconds, while producing enough saliva for testing can take people two to three minutes, and sometimes longer, he said. “That might not sound like much difference,” Turner said, “but it is when you’re trying to push 5,000 people through a test site.”

Curative’s three labs process tens of thousands of tests from jurisdicti­ons across the country in addition to LA, Turner said. A test developed at SUNY Upstate Medical University, which is expected to become available at state labs around New York, also uses an oral swab.

For the Curative test, a health care worker is supposed to oversee the sample collection — reminding people to cough to bring up fluids, for example. When investigat­ors at the University of Illinois launched what they called a “Manhattan Project” to develop a saliva test by mid-June, they hoped to make it possible for people to visit a collection site, drool into a test tube, seal it and drop it off without the aid of a health care worker.

The university is now testing more than 10,000 people a day at its three campuses and is seeking to expand access to communitie­s across the state and country, said chemistry professor Paul Hergenroth­er, who led the research team. Like the similar Yale test, it is being made freely available to other laboratori­es. The University of Notre Dame, in Indiana, recently adopted it.

Like tests using nasopharyn­geal and other kinds of nasal swabs, these saliva tests are based on PCR technology, which amplifies small amounts of viral genetic material to facilitate detection. Both the Yale and University of Illinois tests have managed to simplify the process by eliminatin­g a standard intermedia­te step: the extraction of viral RNA. Their protocols also don’t require viral transport media, or VTM — the chemicals generally used to stabilize the samples after collection.

“You don’t need swabs, you don’t need health care workers, you don’t need VTM, and you don’t need RNA isolation kits,” Hergenroth­er said.

In correspond­ence published in the New England Journal of Medicine, the Yale team reported detecting more viral RNA in saliva specimens than in nasopharyn­geal ones, with a higher proportion of the saliva tests showing positive results for up to 10 days after initial diagnosis.

The National Basketball Associatio­n provided $500,000 in support for the Yale project, said David Weiss, the NBA’s senior vice president for player matters. He said the Yale team’s decision to eliminate the process of RNA extraction, which separates the genetic material from other substances that could complicate detection, involved trade-offs but did not compromise the value of the test.

“Any molecular test that has an RNA extraction step is almost by definition going to be more sensitive, but it will also be more expensive and take longer and use supplies that are in shorter supply,” he said. “If we’re trying to look at surveillan­ce testing to open up schools and nursing homes, a test that’s still very sensitive and a lot cheaper is an important innovation.” — Kaiser Health News (TNS)

 ??  ?? OPTION: An employee at Spectrum Solutions assembles Covid-19 saliva test kits in Draper, Utah.
OPTION: An employee at Spectrum Solutions assembles Covid-19 saliva test kits in Draper, Utah.

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