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Sensitivity and specificity of in vivo COVID-19 screening by detection dogs: Results of the C19-Screendog multicenter study

Trained dogs can recognize the volatile organic compounds contained in biological samples of patients with COVID-19 infection. We assessed the sensitivity and specificity of in vivo SARS-CoV-2 screening by trained dogs. We recruited five dog-handler dyads. In the operant conditioning phase, the dogs...

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Autores principales: Soggiu, Francesca, Sabbatinelli, Jacopo, Giuliani, Angelica, Benedetti, Riccardo, Marchegiani, Andrea, Sgarangella, Francesco, Tibaldi, Alberto, Corsi, Daniela, Procopio, Antonio Domenico, Calgaro, Sara, Olivieri, Fabiola, Spaterna, Andrea, Zampieri, Roberto, Rippo, Maria Rita
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10209336/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37251897
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e15640
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author Soggiu, Francesca
Sabbatinelli, Jacopo
Giuliani, Angelica
Benedetti, Riccardo
Marchegiani, Andrea
Sgarangella, Francesco
Tibaldi, Alberto
Corsi, Daniela
Procopio, Antonio Domenico
Calgaro, Sara
Olivieri, Fabiola
Spaterna, Andrea
Zampieri, Roberto
Rippo, Maria Rita
author_facet Soggiu, Francesca
Sabbatinelli, Jacopo
Giuliani, Angelica
Benedetti, Riccardo
Marchegiani, Andrea
Sgarangella, Francesco
Tibaldi, Alberto
Corsi, Daniela
Procopio, Antonio Domenico
Calgaro, Sara
Olivieri, Fabiola
Spaterna, Andrea
Zampieri, Roberto
Rippo, Maria Rita
author_sort Soggiu, Francesca
collection PubMed
description Trained dogs can recognize the volatile organic compounds contained in biological samples of patients with COVID-19 infection. We assessed the sensitivity and specificity of in vivo SARS-CoV-2 screening by trained dogs. We recruited five dog-handler dyads. In the operant conditioning phase, the dogs were taught to distinguish between positive and negative sweat samples collected from volunteers' underarms in polymeric tubes. The conditioning was validated by tests involving 16 positive and 48 negative samples held or worn in such a way that the samples were invisible to the dog and handler. In the screening phase the dogs were led by their handlers to a drive-through facility for in vivo screening of volunteers who had just received a nasopharyngeal swab from nursing staff. Each volunteer who had already swabbed was subsequently tested by two dogs, whose responses were recorded as positive, negative, or inconclusive. The dogs’ behavior was constantly monitored for attentiveness and wellbeing. All the dogs passed the conditioning phase, their responses showing a sensitivity of 83–100% and a specificity of 94–100%. The in vivo screening phase involved 1251 subjects, of whom 205 had a COVID-19 positive swab and two dogs per each subject to be screened. Screening sensitivity and specificity were respectively 91.6–97.6% and 96.3–100% when only one dog was involved, whereas combined screening by two dogs provided a higher sensitivity. Dog wellbeing was also analyzed: monitoring of stress and fatigue suggested that the screening activity did not adversely impact the dogs’ wellbeing. This work, by screening a large number of subjects, strengthen recent findings that trained dogs can discriminate between COVID-19 infected and healthy human subjects and introduce two novel research aspects: i) assessement of signs of fatigue and stress in dogs during training and testing, and ii) combining screening by two dogs to improve detection sensitivity and specificity. Using some precautions to reduce the risk of infection and spillover, in vivo COVID-19 screening by a dog-handler dyad can be suitable to quickly screen large numbers of people: it is rapid, non-invasive and economical, since it does not involve actual sampling, lab resources or waste management, and is suitable to screen large numbers of people.
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spelling pubmed-102093362023-05-26 Sensitivity and specificity of in vivo COVID-19 screening by detection dogs: Results of the C19-Screendog multicenter study Soggiu, Francesca Sabbatinelli, Jacopo Giuliani, Angelica Benedetti, Riccardo Marchegiani, Andrea Sgarangella, Francesco Tibaldi, Alberto Corsi, Daniela Procopio, Antonio Domenico Calgaro, Sara Olivieri, Fabiola Spaterna, Andrea Zampieri, Roberto Rippo, Maria Rita Heliyon Research Article Trained dogs can recognize the volatile organic compounds contained in biological samples of patients with COVID-19 infection. We assessed the sensitivity and specificity of in vivo SARS-CoV-2 screening by trained dogs. We recruited five dog-handler dyads. In the operant conditioning phase, the dogs were taught to distinguish between positive and negative sweat samples collected from volunteers' underarms in polymeric tubes. The conditioning was validated by tests involving 16 positive and 48 negative samples held or worn in such a way that the samples were invisible to the dog and handler. In the screening phase the dogs were led by their handlers to a drive-through facility for in vivo screening of volunteers who had just received a nasopharyngeal swab from nursing staff. Each volunteer who had already swabbed was subsequently tested by two dogs, whose responses were recorded as positive, negative, or inconclusive. The dogs’ behavior was constantly monitored for attentiveness and wellbeing. All the dogs passed the conditioning phase, their responses showing a sensitivity of 83–100% and a specificity of 94–100%. The in vivo screening phase involved 1251 subjects, of whom 205 had a COVID-19 positive swab and two dogs per each subject to be screened. Screening sensitivity and specificity were respectively 91.6–97.6% and 96.3–100% when only one dog was involved, whereas combined screening by two dogs provided a higher sensitivity. Dog wellbeing was also analyzed: monitoring of stress and fatigue suggested that the screening activity did not adversely impact the dogs’ wellbeing. This work, by screening a large number of subjects, strengthen recent findings that trained dogs can discriminate between COVID-19 infected and healthy human subjects and introduce two novel research aspects: i) assessement of signs of fatigue and stress in dogs during training and testing, and ii) combining screening by two dogs to improve detection sensitivity and specificity. Using some precautions to reduce the risk of infection and spillover, in vivo COVID-19 screening by a dog-handler dyad can be suitable to quickly screen large numbers of people: it is rapid, non-invasive and economical, since it does not involve actual sampling, lab resources or waste management, and is suitable to screen large numbers of people. Elsevier 2023-04-25 /pmc/articles/PMC10209336/ /pubmed/37251897 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e15640 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Soggiu, Francesca
Sabbatinelli, Jacopo
Giuliani, Angelica
Benedetti, Riccardo
Marchegiani, Andrea
Sgarangella, Francesco
Tibaldi, Alberto
Corsi, Daniela
Procopio, Antonio Domenico
Calgaro, Sara
Olivieri, Fabiola
Spaterna, Andrea
Zampieri, Roberto
Rippo, Maria Rita
Sensitivity and specificity of in vivo COVID-19 screening by detection dogs: Results of the C19-Screendog multicenter study
title Sensitivity and specificity of in vivo COVID-19 screening by detection dogs: Results of the C19-Screendog multicenter study
title_full Sensitivity and specificity of in vivo COVID-19 screening by detection dogs: Results of the C19-Screendog multicenter study
title_fullStr Sensitivity and specificity of in vivo COVID-19 screening by detection dogs: Results of the C19-Screendog multicenter study
title_full_unstemmed Sensitivity and specificity of in vivo COVID-19 screening by detection dogs: Results of the C19-Screendog multicenter study
title_short Sensitivity and specificity of in vivo COVID-19 screening by detection dogs: Results of the C19-Screendog multicenter study
title_sort sensitivity and specificity of in vivo covid-19 screening by detection dogs: results of the c19-screendog multicenter study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10209336/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37251897
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e15640
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