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Highly sensitive scent-detection of COVID-19 patients in vivo by trained dogs

Timely and accurate diagnostics are essential to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, but no test satisfies both conditions. Dogs can scent-identify the unique odors of volatile organic compounds generated during infection by interrogating specimens or, ideally, the body of a patient. After training 6 dogs...

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Autores principales: Vesga, Omar, Agudelo, Maria, Valencia-Jaramillo, Andrés F., Mira-Montoya, Alejandro, Ossa-Ospina, Felipe, Ocampo, Esteban, Čiuoderis, Karl, Pérez, Laura, Cardona, Andrés, Aguilar, Yudy, Agudelo, Yuli, Hernández-Ortiz, Juan P., Osorio, Jorge E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8480816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34587181
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0257474
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author Vesga, Omar
Agudelo, Maria
Valencia-Jaramillo, Andrés F.
Mira-Montoya, Alejandro
Ossa-Ospina, Felipe
Ocampo, Esteban
Čiuoderis, Karl
Pérez, Laura
Cardona, Andrés
Aguilar, Yudy
Agudelo, Yuli
Hernández-Ortiz, Juan P.
Osorio, Jorge E.
author_facet Vesga, Omar
Agudelo, Maria
Valencia-Jaramillo, Andrés F.
Mira-Montoya, Alejandro
Ossa-Ospina, Felipe
Ocampo, Esteban
Čiuoderis, Karl
Pérez, Laura
Cardona, Andrés
Aguilar, Yudy
Agudelo, Yuli
Hernández-Ortiz, Juan P.
Osorio, Jorge E.
author_sort Vesga, Omar
collection PubMed
description Timely and accurate diagnostics are essential to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, but no test satisfies both conditions. Dogs can scent-identify the unique odors of volatile organic compounds generated during infection by interrogating specimens or, ideally, the body of a patient. After training 6 dogs to detect SARS-CoV-2 by scent in human respiratory secretions (in vitro diagnosis), we retrained 5 of them to search and find the infection by scenting the patient directly (in vivo screening). Then, efficacy trials were designed to compare the diagnostic performance of the dogs against that of the rRT-PCR in 848 human subjects: 269 hospitalized patients (COVID-19 prevalence 30.1%), 259 hospital staff (prevalence 2.7%), and 320 government employees (prevalence 1.25%). The limit of detection in vitro was lower than 10(−12) copies ssRNA/mL. During in vivo efficacy experiments, our 5 dogs detected 92 COVID-19 positive patients among the 848 study subjects. The alert (lying down) was immediate, with 95.2% accuracy and high sensitivity (95.9%; 95% C.I. 93.6–97.4), specificity (95.1%; 94.4–95.8), positive predictive value (69.7%; 65.9–73.2), and negative predictive value (99.5%; 99.2–99.7) in relation to rRT-PCR. Seventy-five days after finishing in vivo efficacy experiments, a real-life study (in vivo effectiveness) was executed among the riders of the Metro System of Medellin, deploying the human-canine teams without previous training or announcement. Three dogs were used to examine the scent of 550 volunteers who agreed to participate, both in test with canines and in rRT-PCR testing. Negative predictive value remained at 99.0% (95% C.I. 98.3–99.4), but positive predictive value dropped to 28.2% (95% C.I. 21.1–36.7). Canine scent-detection in vivo is a highly accurate screening test for COVID-19, and it detects more than 99% of infected individuals independent of key variables, such as disease prevalence, time post-exposure, or presence of symptoms. Additional training is required to teach the dogs to ignore odoriferous contamination under real-life conditions.
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spelling pubmed-84808162021-09-30 Highly sensitive scent-detection of COVID-19 patients in vivo by trained dogs Vesga, Omar Agudelo, Maria Valencia-Jaramillo, Andrés F. Mira-Montoya, Alejandro Ossa-Ospina, Felipe Ocampo, Esteban Čiuoderis, Karl Pérez, Laura Cardona, Andrés Aguilar, Yudy Agudelo, Yuli Hernández-Ortiz, Juan P. Osorio, Jorge E. PLoS One Research Article Timely and accurate diagnostics are essential to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, but no test satisfies both conditions. Dogs can scent-identify the unique odors of volatile organic compounds generated during infection by interrogating specimens or, ideally, the body of a patient. After training 6 dogs to detect SARS-CoV-2 by scent in human respiratory secretions (in vitro diagnosis), we retrained 5 of them to search and find the infection by scenting the patient directly (in vivo screening). Then, efficacy trials were designed to compare the diagnostic performance of the dogs against that of the rRT-PCR in 848 human subjects: 269 hospitalized patients (COVID-19 prevalence 30.1%), 259 hospital staff (prevalence 2.7%), and 320 government employees (prevalence 1.25%). The limit of detection in vitro was lower than 10(−12) copies ssRNA/mL. During in vivo efficacy experiments, our 5 dogs detected 92 COVID-19 positive patients among the 848 study subjects. The alert (lying down) was immediate, with 95.2% accuracy and high sensitivity (95.9%; 95% C.I. 93.6–97.4), specificity (95.1%; 94.4–95.8), positive predictive value (69.7%; 65.9–73.2), and negative predictive value (99.5%; 99.2–99.7) in relation to rRT-PCR. Seventy-five days after finishing in vivo efficacy experiments, a real-life study (in vivo effectiveness) was executed among the riders of the Metro System of Medellin, deploying the human-canine teams without previous training or announcement. Three dogs were used to examine the scent of 550 volunteers who agreed to participate, both in test with canines and in rRT-PCR testing. Negative predictive value remained at 99.0% (95% C.I. 98.3–99.4), but positive predictive value dropped to 28.2% (95% C.I. 21.1–36.7). Canine scent-detection in vivo is a highly accurate screening test for COVID-19, and it detects more than 99% of infected individuals independent of key variables, such as disease prevalence, time post-exposure, or presence of symptoms. Additional training is required to teach the dogs to ignore odoriferous contamination under real-life conditions. Public Library of Science 2021-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC8480816/ /pubmed/34587181 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0257474 Text en © 2021 Vesga et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vesga, Omar
Agudelo, Maria
Valencia-Jaramillo, Andrés F.
Mira-Montoya, Alejandro
Ossa-Ospina, Felipe
Ocampo, Esteban
Čiuoderis, Karl
Pérez, Laura
Cardona, Andrés
Aguilar, Yudy
Agudelo, Yuli
Hernández-Ortiz, Juan P.
Osorio, Jorge E.
Highly sensitive scent-detection of COVID-19 patients in vivo by trained dogs
title Highly sensitive scent-detection of COVID-19 patients in vivo by trained dogs
title_full Highly sensitive scent-detection of COVID-19 patients in vivo by trained dogs
title_fullStr Highly sensitive scent-detection of COVID-19 patients in vivo by trained dogs
title_full_unstemmed Highly sensitive scent-detection of COVID-19 patients in vivo by trained dogs
title_short Highly sensitive scent-detection of COVID-19 patients in vivo by trained dogs
title_sort highly sensitive scent-detection of covid-19 patients in vivo by trained dogs
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8480816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34587181
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0257474
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