Aim: This pilot study evaluated the adequacy of self-collected oropharyngeal swabs compared to those collected by trained physicians for molecular detection of respiratory viruses. Method: Oropharyngeal swabs1 were collected from influenza like-illness cases in Lombardy during the 2018/2019 season. Two groups of samples were considered: group 1) 131 swabs collected by general practitioners operating within the Italian Influenza Surveillance Network; group 2) 131 swabs self-collected by hospital healthcare workers (doctors, nurses, technicians, in-training students) after being trained on the sampling procedure by both an explanatory brochure describing the steps of swab collection, point-by-point, and a telephone call to a study staff member who guided sample collection. RNA was extracted from each swab and tested for the detection of the human ribonuclease P gene (RNP) by real-time RT-PCR. Samples with a cycle threshold (Ct)<35 were considered adequate for further virological analysis. Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) was detected by real-time RT-PCR. Results: All samples were positive to RNP detection with Ct<35. The mean Ct value was 25.46 (SD: ±2.40; range: 18.65-30.10) for swabs collected by physicians and 25.93 (SD: ±2.22; range: 19.48-33.13) for self-collected swabs, with no statistically significant difference (p=0.10). RSV-positivity rates were similar among both groups (10.9% vs 7.3%; p=0.39). Conclusions: Self-collected oropharyngeal swabs resulted adequate and comparable to those collected by trained physicians for molecular detection of respiratory viruses. Self-sampling can be a worthwhile strategy of sample collection to implement molecular surveillance of respiratory viruses or to evaluate vaccine effectiveness involving population at lower costs.

Self-sampling versus physician-sampling of oropharyngeal swabs for molecular detection of respiratory viruses: a pilot study / C. Galli, L. Pellegrinelli, G. DEL CASTILLO, G. Forni, C.E. Gandolfi, M. Mosillo, A. Pietronigro, N. Tiwana, S. Castaldi, E. Pariani. ((Intervento presentato al 22. convegno ESCV tenutosi a Copenaghen nel 2019.

Self-sampling versus physician-sampling of oropharyngeal swabs for molecular detection of respiratory viruses: a pilot study

C. Galli;L. Pellegrinelli;G. DEL CASTILLO;G. Forni;C.E. Gandolfi;M. Mosillo;A. Pietronigro;N. Tiwana;S. Castaldi;E. Pariani
2019

Abstract

Aim: This pilot study evaluated the adequacy of self-collected oropharyngeal swabs compared to those collected by trained physicians for molecular detection of respiratory viruses. Method: Oropharyngeal swabs1 were collected from influenza like-illness cases in Lombardy during the 2018/2019 season. Two groups of samples were considered: group 1) 131 swabs collected by general practitioners operating within the Italian Influenza Surveillance Network; group 2) 131 swabs self-collected by hospital healthcare workers (doctors, nurses, technicians, in-training students) after being trained on the sampling procedure by both an explanatory brochure describing the steps of swab collection, point-by-point, and a telephone call to a study staff member who guided sample collection. RNA was extracted from each swab and tested for the detection of the human ribonuclease P gene (RNP) by real-time RT-PCR. Samples with a cycle threshold (Ct)<35 were considered adequate for further virological analysis. Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) was detected by real-time RT-PCR. Results: All samples were positive to RNP detection with Ct<35. The mean Ct value was 25.46 (SD: ±2.40; range: 18.65-30.10) for swabs collected by physicians and 25.93 (SD: ±2.22; range: 19.48-33.13) for self-collected swabs, with no statistically significant difference (p=0.10). RSV-positivity rates were similar among both groups (10.9% vs 7.3%; p=0.39). Conclusions: Self-collected oropharyngeal swabs resulted adequate and comparable to those collected by trained physicians for molecular detection of respiratory viruses. Self-sampling can be a worthwhile strategy of sample collection to implement molecular surveillance of respiratory viruses or to evaluate vaccine effectiveness involving population at lower costs.
No
English
set-2019
Settore MED/42 - Igiene Generale e Applicata
Poster
Intervento inviato
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
ESCV
Copenaghen
2019
22
Convegno internazionale
C. Galli, L. Pellegrinelli, G. DEL CASTILLO, G. Forni, C.E. Gandolfi, M. Mosillo, A. Pietronigro, N. Tiwana, S. Castaldi, E. Pariani
Self-sampling versus physician-sampling of oropharyngeal swabs for molecular detection of respiratory viruses: a pilot study / C. Galli, L. Pellegrinelli, G. DEL CASTILLO, G. Forni, C.E. Gandolfi, M. Mosillo, A. Pietronigro, N. Tiwana, S. Castaldi, E. Pariani. ((Intervento presentato al 22. convegno ESCV tenutosi a Copenaghen nel 2019.
Prodotti della ricerca::14 - Intervento a convegno non pubblicato
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
none
Conference Object
10
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/679701
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