Accuracy of Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction in COVID-19 Patients
Merlin Jayalal Lawrence Panchali, Hyeon Jeong Oh, You Mi Lee, Choon‐Mee Kim, Misbah Tariq, Jun-Won Seo, Da Young Kim, Da Young Kim, et al. (11 authors)
Microbiology Spectrum · 2022-02
Abstract
Numerous research campaigns have addressed the vast majority of clinical and diagnostic specificity and sensitivity of various primer sets of SARS-CoV2 viral detection. Despite the impressive progress made to resolve the pandemic, there is still a need for continuous and active improvement of primers used for diagnosis in clinical practice. Our study significantly exceeds the scale of previously published research on the specificity and sensitivity of different primers comparing with different specimens and is the most comprehensive to date in terms of constant monitoring of primer sets of current usage. Henceforth, our results suggest that sputum samples sensitivity is the highest, followed by nasopharyngeal, saliva, and oropharyngeal samples. The CDC recommends the use of oropharyngeal specimens, leading to certain discrepancy between the guidelines set forth by the CDC and IDSA. We proved that the oropharyngeal samples demonstrated the lowest sensitivity for the detection of SARS-CoV-2.
MeSH terms
- Sputum
- Medicine
- Seroconversion
- Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
- Virology
- Primer (cosmetics)
- Polymerase chain reaction
- Real-time polymerase chain reaction
- Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)
- Internal medicine
- Gastroenterology