The next frontier in coronavirus testing: Identifying the full scope of the pandemic, not just individual infections

From StatNews

By Andrew Joseph @DrewQJoseph

March 27, 2020

Scientists are starting to roll out new blood tests for the coronavirus, a key development that, unlike the current diagnostic tests, will help pinpoint people who are immune and reveal the full scope of the pandemic.

The “serological” tests — which rely on drawn blood, not a nasal or throat swab — can identify people who were infected and have already recovered from Covid-19, including those who were never diagnosed, either because they didn’t feel particularly sick or they couldn’t get an initial test. Scientists expect those individuals will be safe from another infection for at least some time — so the tests could signal who could be prioritized to return to work or serve as a frontline health worker.

The serological tests, which are being deployed in some countries in Asia and are starting to be used at one New York hospital, could also eventually help scientists answer outstanding epidemiological questions about the spread of the virus and might even steer an inoculation strategy should a vaccine make it to market.

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“We need to identify all those people here who not only knew they had the coronavirus but maybe weren’t sure because they didn’t get tested or because they had minimal symptoms,” said Christopher Kirchhoff, a former White House aide who wrote a 2016 review of the U.S. government’s response to the West African Ebola crisis. “You can imagine asking them to take the key roles in our economy to keep things moving, whether that’s manning a checkout aisle at a supermarket or taking the lead for caring for someone else in their family who comes down with the coronavirus.”

Serological tests sniff out antibodies in the blood — molecules made by the immune system in response to a pathogen’s attack.

Right now, the main diagnostic tests for Covid-19 rely on a technology called PCR and search for evidence of the virus’ RNA genome. But as people recover, they vanquish the virus from their system, so PCR isn’t helpful much beyond the infection period.

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Antibodies made in response to a virus, however, persist in the blood, acting like sentinels and rallying an immediate response should the virus try to invade again. The antibodies are unique signatures — different protectors modeled after encountering different viruses — so finding them is a signal of past contact with a particular virus.

It’s the difference between catching an invader red-handed versus going back to the crime scene and dusting for prints.

“It seems very easy to be able to say yes or no, somebody was infected or wasn’t infected,” said Florian Krammer, a virologist at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.

Earlier this month, Krammer and colleagues posted on a preprint server a paper describing the serological assays they had developed to detect previous exposure to SARS-CoV-2, the name of the coronavirus. (Preprints are scientific papers that have not been through the peer-review process yet.) They’ve also started a website where labs can order the ingredients they need to get tests up and running themselves.

And this week, Mount Sinai announced that antibodies detected in blood from recovered patients would be used to treat current patients. It’s hoped that injecting patients with these antibodies — a type of therapy sometimes called convalescent plasma — might provide an initial layer of protection as their own immune system kicks into gear.

Companies and academic researchers are also trying to develop plasma therapies and are scrambling to obtain blood from survivors. Serological tests could help expand the supply.

Other tests are being built as well. Researchers in the Netherlands have unveiled assays, the United Kingdom is preparing to roll out its own antibody tests, and scientists in Singapore have used them to trace chains of transmission. Robert Redfield, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told Congress this month that the agency was developing two serological tests; a CDC spokeswoman did not respond to messages asking for more details about the agency’s tests or its plans.

Companies have also started to sell antibody tests, though some are being framed as another tool to diagnose acute infections. Some experts are skeptical about this approach because it can take the body a few days to ramp up production of the antibodies, meaning a serological test would miss an infection if it was in its early stages.

“It takes you five, seven, 10 days — usually more than one week to develop a robust antibody response,” said Isabella Eckerle, a virologist at Geneva Centre for Emerging Viral Diseases. “And the first week is the week when people shed the virus in the highest concentrations.”

Serological tests are also critical, experts said, for painting a full picture of the virus’s spread, even if not immediately.

In other countries, researchers have started to launch “serosurveys” — testing the blood of a sample of the population to estimate just how widely the virus spread. It’s through these types of retrospective initiatives that the full number of cases can be approximated, which can help explain how common asymptomatic infections may be and calculate a better estimate for the mortality rate of a virus….

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Polski
March 28, 2020 1:00 pm

All of Canada in lock down, quarantine or social and self isolation. This comes from all authorities. How does this happen in our biggest city?

https://torontosun.com/news/local-news/warmington-business-as-usual-in-chinatown-despite-state-of-emergency

Since my gym is closed I have been walking 4 mi. every day by the bay. I see lots of people walking of all ages. Many smile and say hello at appropriate separation. I feel good just getting outside, very therapeutic. I just wish I had a dog to walk, they seem to be having a ball!

Gyan1
March 28, 2020 7:33 pm

Thanks for the article! Better testing is much needed. The current tests have way too many false negatives. A local woman hospitalized with all the Corona symptoms got 4 negatives in a row before the 5th test confirmed she had it.

Roslyn Ross
March 28, 2020 10:32 pm

Since the antibody theory for vaccines has long been dead in the water, although the vaccine industry still clings to it like a lifeboat, just how much meaning is there in any antibody theory?

People with high Titers get diseases for which they were vaccinated and people with none do not. It means just about nothing. Unless of course the entire vaccine mythology is deeply flawed and naturally acquired disease is a different matter entirely.

observa
March 29, 2020 6:02 am

The talk is all about testing and test, test, test according to the WHO but here’s a glimpse of reality on the ground-
https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/world/im-treating-too-many-young-people-for-the-coronavirus/ar-BB11LhLQ
and that’s what I found going on the Oz Healthdirect website’s symptom checker when I had some symptoms of what could be pharyngitis, flu, some coronavirus or the Covid 19 perhaps-
https://www.healthdirect.gov.au/

Now that checker has got more involed with questioning now but at the time it was simply dismissing me as not coming from OS or being in contact with same and not having breathing difficulties. I did have a bad headache felt weak and had a throat that was on fire with a cough at its worst. But in hindsight it was mainly an URTI type affliction that subsided into an occasional cough bringing up phlegm until it cleared although it seemed to clear after a few days but the sore throat did come back again for a second try before finally clearing.

So essentially I had to rely on the symptom checker but now you can see the problem with the SH coming into our winter flu season. Like the doc triaging and turning those young people away you can see how infections like that and flu pharyngitis etc could easily overrun any medical system mixed in with Covid19 as people worry about their like symptoms. We wouldn’t want a bad flu season with ramping in ambulances at hospitals you can get at their peak.

With the PM announcing landlords can’t terminate domestic tenants who can’t pay for the next 6 months and commercial landlords and tenants having to negotiate on that the question arises how long can we smash economic activity with quarantining measures and staying home? Well the answer is it may have to be ongoing for 18months to 2 years before a vaccine is safe and ready to go into the arms first of our precious medicos and carers-
https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/coronavirus/we-should-have-had-vaccine-already-australian-expert-who-cracked-virus-code/ar-BB11PNcs
As fast as the experts can produce what they think will nail it you simply can’t afford to stick it into medicos until you’re absolutely sure it won’t be to their detriment.

That’s the reality but then are we really starving the hosts to get rid of the virus here? Risk averse govt everywhere will naturally try anything before having to face up to that. Flattening the curve means flattening everyone’s economic wellbeing bankrupting many and that’s some tradeoff they’re messing with in order to appear to be in control with their printing press. Will their stagflation recipe cure be worse than the disease? It certainly will be if all they achieve is a rerun of the Great Depression. China is the litmus test on that score now as they return to productivity and real income from it while we print IOUs. What’s the correct call right now eh? Economic or medical?

observa
Reply to  observa
March 29, 2020 7:05 am

Here’s the problem again and note she can’t even tell you what her temperature was. London to a brick she had what I had but I knew my temp was OK and apart from the swollen glands and fiery throat and cough my breathing was OK-
https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/coronavirus/ill-only-get-tested-when-im-dying-fit-and-healthy-ex-soldier-33-says-she-was-turned-away-from-a-coronavirus-testing-centre-and-a-hospital-despite-suffering-severe-symptoms/ar-BB11QdXr
The tattoo is fine irony.

observa
Reply to  observa
March 29, 2020 7:42 pm

This is obviously a handy development for the medicos and here have a crash course in using them as is to be expected in a crisis-
https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/coronavirus/world-first-tool-to-help-medicos-detect-covid-19-could-save-thousands-of-lives/ar-BB11RZza
However that still won’t calm the likes of those briefly interviewed with triage and sent home to get better as we’ve already seen. Why can’t I get a test they cry?

Greg
Reply to  observa
March 29, 2020 4:28 pm

With the PM announcing landlords can’t terminate domestic tenants who can’t pay for the next 6 months

I guess you mean they can’t terminate the lease. Terminating the tenant would be a bit extreme.

Patrick MJD
Reply to  Greg
March 29, 2020 6:29 pm

I live in a place where the owner/agent doesn’t give a toss about tenants and tenancy laws. He draws up his own contracts, gets people to sign them under duress. I didn’t sign a contract because any form of agreement in NSW, be it written, verbal or in electronic form, is legal and all the rules/laws apply equally. However, this particular “owner”, who goes by two names “Alicia” and “Jay”, does not play by the rules and has withheld the bond on at least 3 people who really need the money. I very much suspect I won’t get my bond back either.

observa
Reply to  Greg
March 29, 2020 7:30 pm

No more extreme Greg than lots of small investors or retirees relying on the rental income but still having to pay mortgages, council rates, water and sewer rates, land tax, insurances, strata fees, RE agent fees although I guess they can forget about the maintenance. With most States requiring bonds of 4-6 weeks max to be held in escrow by Govt Residential Tenancies funds at least they should release those so landlords can have some income. Even if they can’t pay their bills and have to capitalise their mortgages for however long it takes as what’s a bond worth now if a tenant goes rogue?

Patrick MJD
Reply to  observa
March 30, 2020 1:40 am

All investments have risk. And what’s a bond/rent when a landlord goes rouge? Yeah! If you dredge the records you will find many more rogue landlords. It is why the laws and rules changed 23rd March 2020 to stop these kinds of people!

observa
Reply to  Patrick MJD
March 30, 2020 2:34 am

With all due respect Patrick the risk is very one sided with the cost of housing vs a few weeks rent and landlords cannot go rogue with the rent in NSW because it must be lodged and any disputes over it arbitrated as anyone can see here-
https://www.fairtrading.nsw.gov.au/housing-and-property/renting

However if you choose to engage in shonky practices and cash in hand or whatever with particular dodgy landlords with no formal lease and bond lodgment then what do you expect? For the vast majority it’s a win win partnership and it won’t help tenants if their landlords go broke with all costs and no income for however long the brains trust deem appropriate.

Greg
March 29, 2020 4:50 pm

US cases most closely resembles Spain, in Europe. If you want a short term estimation of new cases shift Spanish data by 5 days and x3.3

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