Selected article for: "control sera and human coronavirus"

Author: de Assis, Rafael R.; Jain, Aarti; Nakajima, Rie; Jasinskas, Algis; Felgner, Jiin; Obiero, Joshua M.; Adenaiye, Oluwasanmi; Tai, Sheldon; Hong, Filbert; Norris, Philip; Stone, Mars; Simmons, Graham; Bagri, Anil; Schreiber, Martin; Buser, Andreas; Holbro, Andreas; Battegay, Manuel; Milton, Donald K.; Davies, Huw; Corash, Laurence M.; Busch, Michael P.; Felgner, Philip L.; Khan, Saahir
Title: Analysis of SARS-CoV-2 Antibodies in COVID-19 Convalescent Plasma using a Coronavirus Antigen Microarray
  • Cord-id: ax9btc74
  • Document date: 2020_4_17
  • ID: ax9btc74
    Snippet: The current practice for diagnosis of COVID-19, based on SARS-CoV-2 PCR testing of pharyngeal or respiratory specimens in a symptomatic patient at high epidemiologic risk, likely underestimates the true prevalence of infection. Serologic methods can more accurately estimate the disease burden by detecting infections missed by the limited testing performed to date. Here, we describe the validation of a coronavirus antigen microarray containing immunologically significant antigens from SARS-CoV-2,
    Document: The current practice for diagnosis of COVID-19, based on SARS-CoV-2 PCR testing of pharyngeal or respiratory specimens in a symptomatic patient at high epidemiologic risk, likely underestimates the true prevalence of infection. Serologic methods can more accurately estimate the disease burden by detecting infections missed by the limited testing performed to date. Here, we describe the validation of a coronavirus antigen microarray containing immunologically significant antigens from SARS-CoV-2, in addition to SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV, common human coronavirus strains, and other common respiratory viruses. A comparison of antibody profiles detected on the array from control sera collected prior to the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic versus convalescent blood specimens from virologically confirmed COVID-19 cases demonstrates complete discrimination of these two groups. This array can be used as a diagnostic tool, as an epidemiologic tool to more accurately estimate the disease burden of COVID-19, and as a research tool to correlate antibody responses with clinical outcomes.

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