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Pre-analytical properties of different respiratory viruses for PCR-based detection: Comparative analysis of sampling devices and sample stabilization solutions.

Authors :
Hardt, Melina
Kaiser, Franziska
Voss, Thorsten
Oelmüller, Uwe
Zatloukal, Kurt
Source :
New Biotechnology. Mar2024, Vol. 79, p60-70. 11p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

After the decline of the COVID-19 pandemic, health systems were challenged by the simultaneous prevalence of different respiratory viruses causing a wide overlap in symptoms. This increased the demand for multi-virus diagnostic tests which require suitable pre-analytical workflow solutions in order to receive valid diagnostic results. In this context, the effects of specimen storage duration and temperature on the RNA/DNA copy number stability of influenza A/B, RSV A/B, SARS-CoV-2 and adenovirus were examined for four commercially available transport swab systems and saliva collection devices. The respiratory viruses were more stable in the saliva collection devices than in the transport swab systems when stored at RT or 37 °C for up to 96 h. Moreover, no differences between viral nucleic acid stability of enveloped and non-enveloped viruses were observed. The infectivity of all enveloped viruses could be inactivated by the saliva collection device from PreAnalytiX. The Norgen saliva device completely inactivated influenza A/B, while RSV A/B were partially inactivated. The non-enveloped adenovirus was inactivated by a reduction factor of 10E+ 4 in both saliva collection devices. All respiratory viruses remained infectious in the transport swab systems. Two possible transport medium additives were tested which inactivated or strongly reduced viral replication of tested enveloped viruses but had no effect on the non-enveloped adenovirus. Finally the implementation of multi-target detection procedures involving a direct amplification approach was successfully tested by spike-in of all enveloped viruses simultaneously into transport swab systems. This fast and reproducible setup presents a valuable solution for future implementations in multi-virus testing strategies. • Specimen collection, storage, transport and handling influence diagnostic results. • Multi-target detection assays could aid rapid identification of causative pathogens. • Tested saliva collection devices inactivated respiratory viruses used here. • Tested swab systems do not inactivate respiratory viruses used here. • Inactivating additives can reduce the risk of infection for healthcare personnel. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18716784
Volume :
79
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
New Biotechnology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174759416
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nbt.2023.12.005