Saliva is more sensitive for SARS-CoV-2 detection in COVID-19 patients than nasopharyngeal swabs

Anne L. Wyllie(Yale University), John Fournier(Yale University), Arnau Casanovas-Massana(Yale University), Melissa Campbell(Yale University), Maria Tokuyama(Yale University), Pavithra Vijayakumar(Yale University), Bertie Geng(Yale University), M. Catherine Muenker(Yale University), Adam J. Moore(Yale University), Chantal B.F. Vogels(Yale University), Mary E. Petrone(Yale University), Isabel M. Ott(Yale University), Peiwen Lu(Yale University), Arvind Venkataraman(Yale University), Alice Lu-Culligan(Yale University), Jon Klein(Yale University), Rebecca Earnest(Yale University), Michael Simonov(Yale University), Rupak Datta(Yale University), Ryan Handoko(Yale University), Nida Naushad(Yale University), Lorenzo R. Sewanan(Yale University), Jordan Valdez(Yale University), Elizabeth B. White(Yale University), Sarah Lapidus(Yale University), Chaney C. Kalinich(Yale University), Xiaodong Jiang(Yale University), Daniel J. Kim(Yale University), Eriko Kudo(Yale University), Melissa Linehan(Yale University), Tianyang Mao(Yale University), Miyu Moriyama(Yale University), Ji Eun Oh(Yale University), Annsea Park(Yale University), Julio Silva(Yale University), Eric Song(Yale University), Takehiro Takahashi(Yale University), Manabu Taura(Yale University), Orr-El Weizman(Yale University), Patrick Wong(Yale University), Yexin Yang(Yale University), Santos Bermejo(Yale University), Camila D. Odio(Yale New Haven Health System), Saad B. Omer(Yale University), Charles S. Dela Cruz(Yale University), Shelli Farhadian(Yale University), Richard A. Martinello(Yale University), Akiko Iwasaki(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Nathan D. Grubaugh(Yale University), Albert I. Ko(Yale University)
medRxiv
April 22, 2020
Cited by 348Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Rapid and accurate SARS-CoV-2 diagnostic testing is essential for controlling the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The current gold standard for COVID-19 diagnosis is real-time RT-PCR detection of SARS-CoV-2 from nasopharyngeal swabs. Low sensitivity, exposure risks to healthcare workers, and global shortages of swabs and personal protective equipment, however, necessitate the validation of new diagnostic approaches. Saliva is a promising candidate for SARS-CoV-2 diagnostics because (1) collection is minimally invasive and can reliably be self-administered and (2) saliva has exhibited comparable sensitivity to nasopharyngeal swabs in detection of other respiratory pathogens, including endemic human coronaviruses, in previous studies. To validate the use of saliva for SARS-CoV-2 detection, we tested nasopharyngeal and saliva samples from confirmed COVID-19 patients and self-collected samples from healthcare workers on COVID-19 wards. When we compared SARS-CoV-2 detection from patient-matched nasopharyngeal and saliva samples, we found that saliva yielded greater detection sensitivity and consistency throughout the course of infection. Furthermore, we report less variability in self-sample collection of saliva. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that saliva is a viable and more sensitive alternative to nasopharyngeal swabs and could enable at-home self-administered sample collection for accurate large-scale SARS-CoV-2 testing.


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