儿童人群中SARS-CoV-2的唾液检测:诊断准确性研究

CMAJ open Pub Date : 2022-11-08 Print Date: 2022-10-01 DOI:10.9778/cmajo.20210279
Nadia Hua, Martin Corsten, Alexander Bello, Maala Bhatt, Rachael Milwid, David Champredon, Patricia Turgeon, Roger Zemek, Lauren Dawson, Nicholas Mitsakakis, Richard Webster, Lisa Caulley, Jonathan B Angel, Nathalie Bastien, Guillaume Poliquin, Stephanie Johnson-Obaseki
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:在儿科人群中准确、及时地检测SARS-CoV-2对于控制COVID-19大流行至关重要;唾液检测被认为是一种侵入性较小的鼻咽拭子替代方法。我们试图比较在儿科人群中使用唾液和鼻咽拭子检测SARS-CoV-2的情况,并确定使用唾液检测SARS-CoV-2的最佳时间。方法:我们于2021年1月19日至3月26日在加拿大渥太华进行了一项纵向诊断研究。如果3-17岁的儿童表现出COVID-19症状,被确定为SARS-CoV-2阳性患者的高风险或密切接触者,或在过去14天内曾在加拿大境外旅行,则符合资格。参与者提供了鼻咽拭子和唾液样本。唾液采集使用自收集试剂盒(DNA Genotek, OM-505)或海绵基试剂盒(DNA Genotek, ORE-100),如果他们不能提供唾液样本到管。结果:在1580对鼻咽和唾液检测中,60对样本呈SARS-CoV-2阳性。一致阳性44例(73.3%),不一致阳性16例(26.6%),其中仅鼻咽拭子检测阳性8例,仅唾液检测阳性8例。唾液的敏感性为84.6%(95%可信区间为71.9% ~ 93.1%)。解释:在儿科人群中,唾液检测SARS-CoV-2的侵入性较小,并且显示出与鼻咽拭子相似的SARS-CoV-2检测。因此,它可能为诊断儿童SARS-CoV-2感染提供一种可行的替代方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Salivary testing for SARS-CoV-2 in the pediatric population: a diagnostic accuracy study.

Background: Accurate and timely testing for SARS-CoV-2 in the pediatric population is crucial to control the COVID-19 pandemic; saliva testing has been proposed as a less invasive alternative to nasopharyngeal swabs. We sought to compare the detection of SARS-CoV-2 using saliva versus nasopharyngeal swab in the pediatric population, and to determine the optimum time of testing for SARS-CoV-2 using saliva.

Methods: We conducted a longitudinal diagnostic study in Ottawa, Canada, from Jan. 19 to Mar. 26, 2021. Children aged 3-17 years were eligible if they exhibited symptoms of COVID-19, had been identified as a high-risk or close contact to someone confirmed positive for SARS-CoV-2 or had travelled outside Canada in the previous 14 days. Participants provided both nasopharyngeal swab and saliva samples. Saliva was collected using a self-collection kit (DNA Genotek, OM-505) or a sponge-based kit (DNA Genotek, ORE-100) if they could not provide a saliva sample into a tube.

Results: Among 1580 paired nasopharyngeal and saliva tests, 60 paired samples were positive for SARS-CoV-2. Forty-four (73.3%) were concordant-positive results and 16 (26.6%) were discordant, among which 8 were positive only on nasopharyngeal swab and 8 were positive only on saliva testing. The sensitivity of saliva was 84.6% (95% confidence interval 71.9%-93.1%).

Interpretation: Salivary testing for SARS-CoV-2 in the pediatric population is less invasive and shows similar detection of SARS-CoV-2 to nasopharyngeal swabs. It may therefore provide a feasible alternative for diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2 infection in children.

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