Home News Coronavirus | Dry swab RT-PCR COVID-19 test gets ICMR nod

Coronavirus | Dry swab RT-PCR COVID-19 test gets ICMR nod

Coronavirus | Dry swab RT-PCR COVID-19 test gets ICMR nod

CSIR-CCMB’s simpler and cost effective method can ramp up testing.

CSIR-Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB) finally got the permission of the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) to commercially use the ‘game changing technology’ of dry swab RNA-extraction free testing method for the COVID-19 virus on Friday. Developed by the in house research team, it will help public health authorities to scale up the testing at a fraction of the current cost of conventional RT-PCR tests and also give results in a double quick time.

The ICMR has issued an advisory permitting “the use of CSIR-CCMB dry swab method, considering its lesser cost and quick turn-around time after evaluating and finding an overall concordance of 96.9%”. The CCMB has sought the ICMR nod after finding the trial runs successful here in association with the TS health authorities in July and first reported in these columns.

Coronavirus | CCMB finds cheaper, more effective RT-PCR method to test COVID-19 samples

In the conventional testing method, nasopharygeal — nose or oropharyngeal — throat swab samples are collected by sample collection centres from the suspected coronavirus patients. These are transported to testing centres, sometimes even hundreds of kilometres away.

The swab samples are generally placed in a liquid called Viral Transport Medium (VTM) and to avoid leakage, the samples are packed heavily that adds on to sample processing times at both the sample collection and testing centres. Yet, there could be leakages from samples, which render those batches untestable and unsafe in handling, explained CCMB Director Rakesh Mishra.

CCMB researchers have found that the ‘VTM’ can be totally avoided and dry swab technique also does not require RNA extraction process, and can be directly used for RT-PCR testing with sensitivity and specificity similar to the current gold standard. This can be used in settings where automated RNA extraction is not available.

“RNA extraction, even with automation, takes four hours for roughly 500 samples. VTM and RNA extraction both add a significant burden on money and time required for mass testing for coronavirus. We believe the technique’s merit holds for all kinds of settings and has the potential of bringing the costs and time of testing by 40-50%. COVID-19 screening can also be enhanced several fold with immediate effect while, at the same time, making the whole process safer,” said the Director.

CSIR Director-General Shekhar C. Mande said the dry-swab direct RT-PCR method is easy to implement with no requirement of new kits and existing manpower can perform this with no additional training and hence could make a significant contribution to ramping up the testing capacity in the country quickly.

The dry swab test methodology has also been independently corroborated by multiple premier institutes and hospitals such as Centre for DNA Fingerprinting and Diagnostics (CDFD), IISER-Berhapmur, CSIR-NEERI, GMCH-Nagpur, Genepath based in Pune, IGGMSH and MAFSU, Nagpur and also Apollo Hospitals, Hyderabad. It has been published in peer reviewed journal by CSIR-CCMB and by other scientific groups in several prestigious scientific journals across the world, a release stated.

This article is auto-generated by Algorithm Source: www.thehindu.com

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