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[Preprint]. 2022 Apr 26:arXiv:2204.12598v2.

Molecular and Serologic Diagnostic Technologies for SARS-CoV-2

Affiliations

Molecular and Serologic Diagnostic Technologies for SARS-CoV-2

Halie M Rando et al. ArXiv. .

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has presented many challenges that have spurred biotechnological research to address specific problems. Diagnostics is one area where biotechnology has been critical. Diagnostic tests play a vital role in managing a viral threat by facilitating the detection of infected and/or recovered individuals. From the perspective of what information is provided, these tests fall into two major categories, molecular and serological. Molecular diagnostic techniques assay whether a virus is present in a biological sample, thus making it possible to identify individuals who are currently infected. Additionally, when the immune system is exposed to a virus, it responds by producing antibodies specific to the virus. Serological tests make it possible to identify individuals who have mounted an immune response to a virus of interest and therefore facilitate the identification of individuals who have previously encountered the virus. These two categories of tests provide different perspectives valuable to understanding the spread of SARS-CoV-2. Within these categories, different biotechnological approaches offer specific advantages and disadvantages. Here we review the categories of tests developed for the detection of the SARS-CoV-2 virus or antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 and discuss the role of diagnostics in the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests AuthorCompeting InterestsLast ReviewedHalie M. RandoNone2021-01-20Christian BruefferEmployee and shareholder of SAGA Diagnostics AB.2020-11-11Ronan LordanNone2020-11-03Anna Ada DattoliNone2020-03-26David ManheimNone2022-03-15Jesse G. MeyerNone2022-01-06Ariel I. MundoNone2021-12-19Dimitri PerrinNone2020-11-11David MaiNone2021-01-08Nils WellhausenNone2020-11-03COVID-19 Review ConsortiumNone2021-01-16Anthony GitterFiled a patent application with the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation related to classifying activated T cells2020-11-10Casey S. GreeneNone2021-01-20

Figures

Figure 1:
Figure 1:. Summary of Diagnostic Technologies used in COVID-19 Testing.
The immune response to SARS-CoV-2 means that different diagnostic approaches offer different views of COVID-19. Early in the infection course, viral load is high. This means that PCR-based testing and EIA testing for antigens are likely to return positives (as indicated by the green bars at the bottom). As viral load decreases, EIA antigen tests become negative, but PCR-based tests can still detect even very low viral loads. From a serological perspective, IgM peaks in the first few weeks following infection and then decreases, while IgG peaks much later in the infection course. Therefore, serological tests are likely to return positives in first few months following the acute infection course. Additional detail is available above and in several analyses and reviews [1,131,160,175].

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