Back to Search Start Over

Urine Metabolites Enable Fast Detection of COVID-19 Using Mass Spectrometry

Authors :
Alexandre Varao Moura
Danilo Cardoso de Oliveira
Alex Ap. R. Silva
Jonas Ribeiro da Rosa
Pedro Henrique Dias Garcia
Pedro Henrique Godoy Sanches
Kyana Y. Garza
Flavio Marcio Macedo Mendes
Mayara Lambert
Junier Marrero Gutierrez
Nicole Marino Granado
Alicia Camacho dos Santos
Iasmim Lopes de Lima
Lisamara Dias de Oliveira Negrini
Marcia Aparecida Antonio
Marcos N. Eberlin
Livia S. Eberlin
Andreia M. Porcari
Source :
Metabolites, Vol 12, Iss 11, p 1056 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2022.

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic boosted the development of diagnostic tests to meet patient needs and provide accurate, sensitive, and fast disease detection. Despite rapid advancements, limitations related to turnaround time, varying performance metrics due to different sampling sites, illness duration, co-infections, and the need for particular reagents still exist. As an alternative diagnostic test, we present urine analysis through flow-injection–tandem mass spectrometry (FIA-MS/MS) as a powerful approach for COVID-19 diagnosis, targeting the detection of amino acids and acylcarnitines. We adapted a method that is widely used for newborn screening tests on dried blood for urine samples in order to detect metabolites related to COVID-19 infection. We analyzed samples from 246 volunteers with diagnostic confirmation via PCR. Urine samples were self-collected, diluted, and analyzed with a run time of 4 min. A Lasso statistical classifier was built using 75/25% data for training/validation sets and achieved high diagnostic performances: 97/90% sensitivity, 95/100% specificity, and 95/97.2% accuracy. Additionally, we predicted on two withheld sets composed of suspected hospitalized/symptomatic COVID-19-PCR negative patients and patients out of the optimal time-frame collection for PCR diagnosis, with promising results. Altogether, we show that the benchmarked FIA-MS/MS method is promising for COVID-19 screening and diagnosis, and is also potentially useful after the peak viral load has passed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22181989
Volume :
12
Issue :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Metabolites
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.f2607129366746178658e5b635650ad6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo12111056