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Published July 2020 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Overcoming the bottleneck to widespread testing: a rapid review of nucleic acid testing approaches for COVID-19 detection

Abstract

The current COVID-19 pandemic presents a serious public health crisis, and a better understanding of the scope and spread of the virus would be aided by more widespread testing. Nucleic-acid-based tests currently offer the most sensitive and early detection of COVID-19. However, the "gold standard" test pioneered by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention takes several hours to complete and requires extensive human labor, materials such as RNA extraction kits that could become in short supply, and relatively scarce qPCR machines. It is clear that a huge effort needs to be made to scale up current COVID-19 testing by orders of magnitude. There is thus a pressing need to evaluate alternative protocols, reagents, and approaches to allow nucleic-acid testing to continue in the face of these potential shortages. There has been a tremendous explosion in the number of papers written within the first weeks of the pandemic evaluating potential advances, comparable reagents, and alternatives to the "gold-standard" CDC RT-PCR test. Here we present a collection of these recent advances in COVID-19 nucleic acid testing, including both peer-reviewed and preprint articles. Due to the rapid developments during this crisis, we have included as many publications as possible, but many of the cited sources have not yet been peer-reviewed, so we urge researchers to further validate results in their own laboratories. We hope that this review can urgently consolidate and disseminate information to aid researchers in designing and implementing optimized COVID-19 testing protocols to increase the availability, accuracy, and speed of widespread COVID-19 testing.

Additional Information

© 2020 Esbin et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the RNA Society. This article, published in RNA, is available undera Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. Freely available online through the RNA Open Access option. We thank all of the members of the Tjian and Darzacq laboratory for their reading, insights, and helpful discussions on this review. We would expressly like to thank the Tjian and Darzacq COVID-19 response team for their unpublished findings relevant to COVID-19 testing presented here. The authors gratefully acknowledge funding from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (grant CC34430 to R.T. and M.N.E.) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH training program grant T32GM098218 to M.N.E. and NIH training program grant T32GM007232 to O.N.W.). Author contributions: M.N.E. developed the concept; M.N.E., O.N.W., and S.C. contributed to the design and writing of the review; and A.M. prepared the figures. All authors contributed to the reading, collection, and analysis of sources for this review.

Attached Files

Published - RNA-2020-Esbin-771-83.pdf

Supplemental Material - Supplemental_Table_Legends.docx

Supplemental Material - Supplemental_Table_S1_.xlsx

Supplemental Material - Supplemental_Table_S2_.xlsx

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023