4.6 Article

The early detection of immunoglobulins via optical-based lateral flow immunoassay platform in COVID-19 pandemic

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 16, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0254486

Keywords

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Funding

  1. SpectroChip Inc.
  2. Taipei Hospital Ministry of Health and Welfare
  3. Ministry of Science and Technology in Taiwan [MOST 109-2628-B-192-001, MOST 110-2218-E-011-008]

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A new optical platform is developed in this study for quantitative detection of antibodies in COVID-19 patients, showing significant advantages over other serum antibody reagents on the market. Early identification of elevated IgM levels in relation to COVID-19 infection is found, and the platform demonstrates sensitivity and accuracy in detecting RT-PCR negative patients.
The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is the global public health challenge currently persisting at a grand scale. A method that meets the rapid quantitative detection of antibodies to assess the body's immune response from natural COVID-19 illness or vaccines' effects is urgently needed. In the present study, an attempt was made to integrate a newly designed spectrometer to the COVID-19 test strip procedure; this augmentation provides the quantitative capacity to a lateral flow immunoassay (LFIA). Optical interpretation of results by quantitative alpha index, rather than visual qualification, can be done quickly, in 5-10 minutes. The developed product was compared with several other serological IgM/IgG antibody reagents on the market by recruiting 111 participants suspected of having COVID-19 infection from March to May 2020 in a hospital. Taking RT-PCR as the diagnostic gold standard, the quantitative spectral LIFA platform could correctly detect all 12 COVID-19 patients. Concerning RT-PCR negative patients, all three antibody testing methods found positive cases. The optical-based platform exhibited the ability of early detection of immunoglobulins of RT-PCR negative patients. There was an apparent trend that elevation of IgM levels in the acute phase of infection; then IgG levels rose later. It exhibited the risk of a false-negative diagnosis of RT-PCR in COVID-19 testing. The significant detection ability of this new optical-based platform demonstrated clinical potential.

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