4.7 Article

Cross-Sectional Study on Lateral Skull Radiographs to Design a New Nasopharyngeal Swab for Simplified COVID-19 and Respiratory Infections Diagnostic Testing in Children

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm12010213

Keywords

nasopharyngeal swab; sample collection; COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; respiratory infections; children; lateral skull radiograph

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This study aims to design a standardized and convenient nasopharyngeal swab for children and adolescents by collecting nostril to nasopharynx distance measurements on lateral skull radiographs. A total of 323 cephalograms of 152 male and 171 female children aged 4-14 years were analyzed. The new nasopharyngeal swab simplifies the specimen collection process, allowing healthcare providers to collect samples from children in a safe and effective way, even under less-than-ideal conditions in 'point-of-need' contexts.
Nasopharyngeal swab sample collection is the first-line testing method for diagnosing COVID-19 infection and other respiratory infections. Current information on how to properly perform nasopharyngeal swabbing in children is largely defective. This study aimed at collecting nostril to nasopharynx distance measurements on lateral skull radiographs of children and adolescents to design a nasopharyngeal swab meant to standardize and facilitate the sample collection procedure. A total of 323 cephalograms of 152 male and 171 female children aged 4-14 years taken for orthodontic reasons were selected. On each cephalogram, the shortest distance between the most anterosuperior point of the nostril contour and the nasopharynx outline was measured in mm parallel to the palatal plane. Descriptive statistics of the measurements were calculated for each age group. The lower limit of the 95% confidence intervals of the measurements was taken as a reference to design a swab shaft with marks that, at each age, delimitate a safety boundary for swab progression up to the posterior nasopharyngeal wall. The simplification of the procedure enabled by the newly designed nasopharyngeal swab is valuable to help healthcare providers perform specimen collection on children in a safe and effective way, perhaps under the less-than-ideal conditions possibly occurring in 'point-of-need' contexts.

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