Laboratory Diagnosis and Monitoring the Viral Shedding of SARS-CoV-2 Infection

Yang Yang(Shenzhen Third People’s Hospital), Minghui Yang(Shenzhen Third People’s Hospital), Jing Yuan(Shenzhen Third People’s Hospital), Fuxiang Wang(Shenzhen Third People’s Hospital), Zhaoqin Wang(Southern University of Science and Technology), Jinxiu Li(Southern University of Science and Technology), Mingxia Zhang(Shenzhen Third People’s Hospital), Li Xing(Southern University of Science and Technology), Jinli Wei(Southern University of Science and Technology), Ling Peng(Shenzhen Third People’s Hospital), Gary Wong(Institut Pasteur of Shanghai), Haixia Zheng(Shenzhen Third People’s Hospital), Weibo Wu(Southern University of Science and Technology), Chenguang Shen(Southern University of Science and Technology), Mingfeng Liao(Shenzhen Third People’s Hospital), Kai Feng(Southern University of Science and Technology), Jianming Li(Southern University of Science and Technology), Qianting Yang(Shenzhen Third People’s Hospital), Juanjuan Zhao(Southern University of Science and Technology), Lei Liu(Shenzhen Third People’s Hospital), Yingxia Liu(Shenzhen Third People’s Hospital)
The Innovation
November 1, 2020
Cited by 244Open Access
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Abstract

The worldwide epidemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is ongoing. Rapid and accurate detection of the causative virus SARS-CoV-2 is vital for the treatment and control of COVID-19. In this study, the comparative sensitivity of different respiratory specimen types were retrospectively analyzed using 3,552 clinical samples from 410 COVID-19 patients confirmed by Guangdong CDC (Center for Disease Control and Prevention). Except for bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF), the sputum possessed the highest positive rate (73.4%-87.5%), followed by nasal swabs (53.1%-85.3%) for both severe and mild cases during the first 14 days after illness onset (d.a.o.). Viral RNA could be detected in all BALF samples collected from the severe group within 14 d.a.o. and lasted up to 46 d.a.o. Moreover, although viral RNA was negative in the upper respiratory samples, it was also positive in BALF samples in most cases from the severe group during treatment. Notably, no viral RNA was detected in BALF samples from the mild group. Despite typical ground-glass opacity observed via computed tomographic scans, no viral RNA was detected in the first three or all upper respiratory tract specimens from some COVID-19 patients. In conclusion, sputum is most sensitive for routine laboratory diagnosis of COVID-19, followed by nasal swabs. Detection of viral RNA in BALF improves diagnostic accuracy in severe COVID-19 patients.


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