Exploratory study to assess the functional capacity, safety and ability to isolate novel COVID-19 of a novel self-administrative nasopharyngeal wash specimen collecting device

IF 1.4 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES BMJ Innovations Pub Date : 2024-01-10 DOI:10.1136/bmjinnov-2023-001122
S K Mohanasundari, Sivam Thanigainathan, R Gadapalli, Pankaj Rawat, S Vandana, K Deepak, N Gupta
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Abstract

Introduction Although nasopharyngeal/oropharyngeal swabs are considered the gold standard for SARS-CoV-2 diagnosis, these procedures are distressing, require trained personnel and may pose a risk of transmission. Aim This study aims to assess the functional capacity, safety, ability to isolate the novel COVID-19 and end-users’ acceptance of a novel self-collection device for obtaining nasopharyngeal wash samples. Methods Initially, the novel device’s functional capacity (amount of nasopharyngeal wash specimen collected by participants themselves using the novel device) and safety (procedure-related complications such as bleeding, aspiration or syncope) were assessed in 15 healthy volunteers. Then, its ability to isolate the novel COVID-19 in symptomatic patients, procedure-related discomfort and end-users’ acceptance were compared with the conventional nasopharyngeal/oropharyngeal swab technique. Results All 15 volunteers obtained more than 1 mL of nasopharyngeal wash sample using the novel device, with no reported medical complications. Out of 14 COVID-19-suspected patients, 9 tested positive using the novel method compared with 8 with the conventional method (p=0.09). The novel method demonstrated significantly less discomfort (median score 1 vs 5, p<0.001) and significantly higher acceptability (median score 9 vs 2, p<0.001) compared with the conventional method. Conclusion The novel self-administrative nasopharyngeal wash specimen-collecting device allowed patients to collect samples safely. The procedure could isolate the novel COVID-19 from the nasopharynx, similar to the conventional nasopharyngeal swab technique. The novel method was less discomforting and more acceptable for end-users compared with the conventional method and is suitable for mass screening.
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一项探索性研究,旨在评估新型自取式鼻咽清洗标本收集装置的功能能力、安全性和分离新型 COVID-19 的能力
引言 尽管鼻咽/咽拭子被认为是诊断 SARS-CoV-2 的黄金标准,但这些过程令人痛苦,需要训练有素的人员,并可能带来传播风险。目的 本研究旨在评估用于获取鼻咽洗液样本的新型自取装置的功能能力、安全性、分离新型 COVID-19 的能力以及最终用户的接受程度。方法 首先,在 15 名健康志愿者中评估了新型装置的功能能力(参与者使用新型装置自行采集的鼻咽洗液样本量)和安全性(程序相关并发症,如出血、吸入或晕厥)。然后,比较了新型 COVID-19 与传统鼻咽/咽拭子技术在无症状患者中的分离能力、手术相关不适以及最终用户的接受程度。结果 所有 15 名志愿者都使用新型装置获得了超过 1 毫升的鼻咽冲洗样本,未报告医疗并发症。在 14 名疑似 COVID-19 患者中,使用新型方法检测出 9 例阳性,而使用传统方法检测出 8 例阳性(P=0.09)。与传统方法相比,新型方法的不适感明显降低(中位数为 1 vs 5,p<0.001),可接受性明显提高(中位数为 9 vs 2,p<0.001)。结论 新型自我鼻咽清洗标本采集装置可让患者安全地采集标本。该方法可从鼻咽分离出新型 COVID-19,与传统的鼻咽拭子技术相似。与传统方法相比,这种新方法对终端用户的不适感更小,更容易被接受,适合大规模筛查。
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来源期刊
BMJ Innovations
BMJ Innovations Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
63
期刊介绍: Healthcare is undergoing a revolution and novel medical technologies are being developed to treat patients in better and faster ways. Mobile revolution has put a handheld computer in pockets of billions and we are ushering in an era of mHealth. In developed and developing world alike healthcare costs are a concern and frugal innovations are being promoted for bringing down the costs of healthcare. BMJ Innovations aims to promote innovative research which creates new, cost-effective medical devices, technologies, processes and systems that improve patient care, with particular focus on the needs of patients, physicians, and the health care industry as a whole and act as a platform to catalyse and seed more innovations. Submissions to BMJ Innovations will be considered from all clinical areas of medicine along with business and process innovations that make healthcare accessible and affordable. Submissions from groups of investigators engaged in international collaborations are especially encouraged. The broad areas of innovations that this journal aims to chronicle include but are not limited to: Medical devices, mHealth and wearable health technologies, Assistive technologies, Diagnostics, Health IT, systems and process innovation.
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