The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has resulted in an international shortage of the nasopharyngeal (NP) swabs used to collect sample for virological testing. This shortage has become a crisis as testing capacity is growing, and threatens to become the bottleneck at University of Virginia Health System and in the Commonwealth of Virginia, as it already is in other testing centers. To resolve this crisis, a team in the Clinical Microbiology Laboratories at University of Virginia Medical Center has been working closely with biomedical engineers in the University of Virginia (UVA), School of Engineering and with high volume domestic manufacturers developing injection molded polypropylene flocked nylon NP swab. This prototype will be tested for non-inferiority relative to existing, already validated NP swabs ("control swab") for purposes of molecular microbiology: i.e. the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests used for virological testing for SARS-CoV-2. Specifically, the nasopharynx of patients with Covid-19 and patients under investigation (PUI) for Covid-19, the disease caused by SARS-CoV-2, will be swabbed using a prototype swab and a control swab (the standard of care swab), and test for concordance of SARS-CoV-2. In all cases the swab will be transported in validated FDA cleared viral transport medium (VTM) as per standard operating procedure at University of Virginia Medical Center.
Device: Control swab
FDA-cleared nasopharyngeal swab
Device: Prototype swab
Injection molded polypropylene flocked nylon nasopharyngeal swab
Inclusion Criteria:
- Individuals presenting to the site for clinical care will be evaluated for clinical
screening for Covid-19 testing or other respiratory infection testing.
- Individuals felt identified clinically as needing Covid-19 testing may be approached
for study participation.
- Individuals already under clinical care that have tested positive for Covid-19 will be
approached for study participation.
- Volunteer health care workers who have approached the Principal Investigator
Exclusion Criteria:
- Known thrombocytopenia of <50,000 platelets/μl (risk of mild bleeding).
- Individuals presenting with an anatomically altered nasal cavity.
- Pregnant (self-reported)
- No other patients will be specifically excluded.
University of Virginia
Charlottesville, Virginia, United States
Amy Mathers, MD, Principal Investigator
University of Virginia