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Get the most interesting and important stories from the 51精品视频.Where Does Your Swab Go After Surveillance Testing?
Ever wonder what happens to the COVID-19 swab after ?
At 51精品视频, 鈥檚 lab plays a major role. For starters, the (MiGEL) pools portions of each specimen from surveillance testing of asymptomatic 51精品视频 students. Pooling works by combining parts of multiple samples into one batch, then sending the batch to a lab certified for COVID-19 testing.
Harrison explained: If a pool comes back negative, no further action is needed. If a pool comes back positive, the remaining part of each specimen is sent for testing separately to determine which individuals are positive.
鈥淧ooling is a great way to expand testing capacity, especially in low prevalence situations,鈥 said Harrison, a professor of medicine and associate chief of epidemiology and education in 51精品视频鈥檚 in the . 鈥淭he reason that MiGEL is involved is because we have a robot liquid handler, called epMotion, that automates the otherwise very tedious pooling process.鈥
, professor of and at 51精品视频 and medical director of the UPMC Clinical Laboratories, added, 鈥淭he MiGEL strikes a complex balance between sensitivity and expansion in a new manner that required authorization from the FDA for clinical testing.鈥
Thanks to pooling, 51精品视频 has been able to essentially quadruple its testing efficiency. To date, 4,193 randomly selected, asymptomatic 51精品视频 students have been tested in surveillance testing since it began on Aug. 12, 2020. Sixteen of those tests to date have come back positive, resulting in a 0.38% virus prevalence rate on the 51精品视频sburgh campus. By randomly testing roughly 10 percent of the campus population throughout the term, the University is able to monitor and hopefully contain the spread of COVID-19 on and off campus. (See more on .)
And Harrison, who also chairs the Allegheny County Health Department鈥檚 , has plans for his lab to further investigate how cases of how COVID-19 might develop on 51精品视频鈥檚 campuses, even among a population with limited cases.
Over the past several years, MiGEL has been doing whole genome sequencing on bacteria, which, when coupled with machine learning and e-health record data mining,聽can identify undetected outbreaks of serious infections in hospital settings. Now, MiGEL is expanding the project to include respiratory viruses鈥攊ncluding SARS-CoV-2鈥攗sing specimens from both symptomatic and asymptomatic testing at 51精品视频. The goal is to better understand viral transmission in a site-specific way.
Harrison said there are several universities that do SARS-CoV-2 whole genome sequencing, but it鈥檚 not clear how many will be sequencing their student specimens. 鈥淚鈥檓 fairly certain there will be some.鈥
Even though the Harrison lab has used the epMotion robot for several years in National Institutes of Health funded applied research, 鈥渋t took a monumental effort by Dr. who is the director of my lab, and the rest of our lab team to gear up to do the pooling,鈥 Harrison said.
鈥淭he special tube racks we needed were out of stock, so we asked the , which really stepped up to the plate, to rapidly make around 50 racks for us. We also had to scramble to find all of the different types of tubes in the middle of the pandemic with all of the associated supply shortages, get the epMotion reprogrammed to run the pooling protocol and make sure we had the right biosafety protocols in place before starting. We got ready just in time for the return of the students.鈥
Harrison thinks we may eventually have a vaccine that provides a robust immune response to COVID-19, 鈥渂ut the proof will be in the results of the clinical trials.鈥
Until then, it鈥檚 all about teams like his doing the testing鈥攁nd everyone doing their part to mitigate the virus鈥 spread: Wear a face covering, wash your hands for 20 seconds and maintain physical distance of at least six feet.