4.6 Article

SARS-CoV-2 Subgenomic N (sgN) Transcripts in Oro-Nasopharyngeal Swabs Correlate with the Highest Viral Load, as Evaluated by Five Different Molecular Methods

Journal

DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics11020288

Keywords

SARS-CoV-2 subgenomic regions; viral load; CE-IVD

Funding

  1. project 'CEINGE TASK-FORCE COVID-19' by Regione Campania for the fight against COVID-19 [D64I200003800, 140]

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The study compared five CE-IVD kits in detecting synthetic SARS-CoV-2 viral constructs and targets in samples from twenty COVID-19-positive patients. The results showed that the kits exhibited variable performances in detecting viral target genes, with the detection of the sgN transcript being associated with higher viral loads, representing a new marker for early and more severe infection.
Background The COVID-19 pandemic has forced diagnostic laboratories to focus on the early diagnostics of SARS-CoV-2. The positivity of a molecular test cannot respond to the question regarding the viral capability to replicate, spread, and give different clinical effects. Despite the fact that some targets are covered by commercially-available assays, the identification of new biomarkers is desired in order to improve the quality of the information given by these assays. Therefore, since the subgenomic transcripts (sgN and sgE) are considered markers of viral activity, we evaluated these subgenomic transcripts in relation to the genomic amplification obtained using five different commercial CE-IVD tools. Methods: Five CE-IVD kits were compared in terms of their capability to detect both synthetic SARS-CoV-2 viral constructs (spiked in TMB or PBS medium) and targets (N, E, RdRp and Orf1ab genes) in twenty COVID-19-positive patients' swabs. The sgN and sgE were assayed by real-time RT-qPCR and digital PCR. Results: None of the diagnostic kits missed the viral target genes when they were applied to targets spiked in TMB or PBS (at dilutions ranging from 100 pg to 0.1 pg). Nevertheless, once they were applied to RNA extracted from the patients' swabs, the superimposability ranged from 50% to 100%, regardless of the extraction procedure. The sgN RNA transcript was detected only in samples with a higher viral load (Ct <= 22.5), while sgE was within all of the Ct ranges. Conclusions: The five kits show variable performances depending on the assay layout. It is worthy of note that the detection of the sgN transcript is associated with a higher viral load, thus representing a new marker of early and more severe infection.

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