| Literature DB >> 34203612 |
Siming Lu1,2, Sha Lin2, Hongrui Zhang1, Liguo Liang2,3, Shien Shen1.
Abstract
Respiratory viral infections threaten human life and inflict an enormous healthcare burden worldwide. Frequent monitoring of viral antibodies and viral load can effectively help to control the spread of the virus and make timely interventions. However, current methods for detecting viral load require dedicated personnel and are time-consuming. Additionally, COVID-19 detection is generally relied on an automated PCR analyzer, which is highly instrument-dependent and expensive. As such, emerging technologies in the development of respiratory viral load assays for point-of-care (POC) testing are urgently needed for viral screening. Recent advances in loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP), biosensors, nanotechnology-based paper strips and microfluidics offer new strategies to develop a rapid, low-cost, and user-friendly respiratory viral monitoring platform. In this review, we summarized the traditional methods in respiratory virus detection and present the state-of-art technologies in the monitoring of respiratory virus at POC.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; detection; point-of-care; respiratory virus
Year: 2021 PMID: 34203612 PMCID: PMC8232111 DOI: 10.3390/mi12060697
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Advantages and drawbacks of traditional virus detection methods.
| Method | Principle | Time Required |
|---|---|---|
| Virus plaque test | infectivity detection | several days |
| Immunofluorescent plaque test | infectivity detection | several days |
| qPCR | viral nucleic acid detection | several hours |
| ELISA | viral protein detection | several hours |
| Hemagglutination assay | viral protein detection | several hours |
| Viral flow cytometry | viral particle detection | several hours |
| Transmission electron microscopy | viral particle detection | several weeks |
Characteristics of commercial respiratory virus detection tests.
| Company | Kit | Virus | Principle | Sample Type | Sensitivity | Specificity | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abbott | SD BIOLINE Influenza Antigen | Influenza virus type A&B and H1N1 | antigen test | human nasal swab, throat swab, nasopharyngeal swab or nasal/nasopharyngeal aspirate | 91.8% | 98.9% | 5 min |
| Abbott | SD BIOLINE Influenza Ultra | Influenza virus type A&B | antigen test | nasopharyngeal swab, nasopharygeal aspirate | nasopharyngeal swab | nasopharyngeal swab | 5–8 min |
| Abbott | CLEARVIEW® EXACT INFLUENZA A&B | Influenza virus type A&B | antigen test | nasopharyngeal swab | Flu A: 81.7% | Flu A: 98.5% | 15 min |
| Abbott | BINAXNOW® INFLUENZA A&B | Influenza virus type A&B | chromatographic immunoassay | nasopharyngeal swab, nasopharygeal aspirate | Flu A: 70–89% | Flu A: 90–99% | 15 min |
| BIOFIRE | The BioFire® FilmArray® Respiratory (RP&RP2) Panels | VIRUSES: | Real-time RT-PCR molecular test | nasopharyngeal swab in transport media | 97.1% | 99.3% | 45 min |
| BIOFIRE | The BioFire® FilmArray® Respiratory EZ (RP EZ) Panel | VIRUSES:Adenovirus; Coronavirus; Human Metapneumovirus; Human Rhinovirus/Enterovirus; Influenza A; Influenza A/H1; Influenza A/H3; Influenza A/H1-2009; Influenza B; Parainfluenza Virus; Respiratory | Real-time RT-PCR molecular test | nasopharyngeal swab | BAL: 96.2% Sputum: 96.3% | BAL: 98.3% Sputum:97.2% | 45 min |
| Cepheid | Xpert® Xpress SARS-CoV-2 | SARS-CoV-2 | Real-time RT-PCR molecular test results | nasal swab, nasopharyngeal swab, aspirate specimens | 100% | 100% | 45 min |
| Cepheid | Xpert®Xpress Flu/RSV | Detects viral RNA, enabling better detection of seasonal mutations of the flu virus (A,b,RSV) | Real-time RT-PCR molecular test results | nasal swab, nasopharyngeal swab specimens | Flu A: 98.1% | Flu A: 98.1% | 20 min |
Figure 1LAMP assay for MERS-CoV detection. (A) Schematic of the RT-LAMP with RT-LAMP-VF; (B) Comparison of sensitivity between conventional RT-LAMP and RT-LAMP-VF (reproduced with permission [45]. Copyright 2018, Frontiers). RT-LAMP: reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification; RT-LAMP-VF: RT-LAMP with a vertical flow visualization strip.
Figure 2Paper-based strip for respiratory virus detection. (A) (i) Schematic of the Magnetic SERS Strip in detection of H1N1 and HAdV; (ii) Comparison of magnetic SERS strips and commercially gold strips for H1N1 and HAdV detection (reproduced with permission [47]. Copyright 2019, American Chemical Society). (B) (i) Schematic of Multiplex Paper-Based colorimetric device; (ii) selectivity of three virus (i.e., MERS-CoV, MTB, and HPV) detection via multiplex colorimetric paper device (reproduced with permission [49]. Copyright 2017, American Chemical Society).
Figure 3Biosensors for respiratory virus detection. (A) (i) Schematic of development of electrochemical influenza A biosensor; (ii) selectivity of the biosensor (reproduced with [51]. Copyright 2017, Royal Society of Chemistry). (B) (i) Scheme of the arch-shaped multiple-target sensing platform for diagnosis and identification of emerging infectious pathogens; (ii) utility of the arch-shaped multiple-target sensing platform in detecting of clinical samples (reproduced with [54]. Copyright 2018, Royal Society of Chemistry).
Figure 4Microfluidic device for respiratory virus detection. (A) Schematic diagram of the LAMP-integrated microfluidic chip system for multiplexed respiratory virus detection (LMCS-MRVAs) (reproduced with [55]. Copyright 2018, Royal Society of Chemistry). (B) Schematic of the disc-shaped microfluidic device (reproduced with [57]. Copyright 2020, Elsevier).
Figure 5Smartphone-based POC platforms for respiratory virus detection. (A) (i) Photograph of the smartphone-based on-chip system; (ii) smartphone application interface; (iii) graphs of AIV virus detection with the smartphone-based on-chip detection system; (iv) comparison of with/without the herringbone structure and ZnO nanorod replication virus detection; (v) comparison of the colorimetric detection system and conventional ELISA assay in virus detection (reproduced with [58]. Copyright 2019, American Chemical Society). (B) (i) The chip is heated at 65 °C for LAMP reactions and inserted into the cradle for end-point fluorescence imaging; (ii) fluorescence image of EHV1 templates at different concentrations (reproduced with [59]. Copyright 2020, Royal Society of Chemistry).