COVID-19: Anal Chem 2020 Aug 4;92(15)

Molecular Diagnosis of COVID-19: Challenges and Research Needs

4 August 2020

Anal. Chem. 2020 Aug 4;92(15):10196-10209.
Molecular Diagnosis of COVID-19: Challenges and Research Needs
Wei Feng 1Ashley M Newbigging 1Connie Le 2Bo Pang 1Hanyong Peng 1Yiren Cao 1Jinjun Wu 1Ghulam Abbas 3Jin Song 3Dian-Bing Wang 3Mengmeng Cui 3Jeffrey Tao 1D Lorne Tyrrell 2Xian-En Zhang 3Hongquan Zhang 1X Chris Le 1

Abstract

Molecular diagnosis of COVID-19 primarily relies on the detection of RNA of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, the causative infectious agent of the pandemic. Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) enables sensitive detection of specific sequences of genes that encode the RNA dependent RNA polymerase (RdRP), nucleocapsid (N), envelope (E), and spike (S) proteins of the virus. Although RT-PCR tests have been widely used and many alternative assays have been developed, the current testing capacity and availability cannot meet the unprecedented global demands for rapid, reliable, and widely accessible molecular diagnosis. Challenges remain throughout the entire analytical process, from the collection and treatment of specimens to the amplification and detection of viral RNA and the validation of clinical sensitivity and specificity. We highlight the main issues surrounding molecular diagnosis of COVID-19, including false negatives from the detection of viral RNA, temporal variations of viral loads, selection and treatment of specimens, and limiting factors in detecting viral proteins. We discuss critical research needs, such as improvements in RT-PCR, development of alternative nucleic acid amplification techniques, incorporating CRISPR technology for point-of-care (POC) applications, validation of POC tests, and sequencing of viral RNA and its mutations. Improved assays are also needed for environmental surveillance or wastewater-based epidemiology, which gauges infection on the community level through analyses of viral components in the community's wastewater. Public health surveillance benefits from large-scale analyses of antibodies in serum, although the current serological tests do not quantify neutralizing antibodies. Further advances in analytical technology and research through multidisciplinary collaboration will contribute to the development of mitigation strategies, therapeutics, and vaccines. Lessons learned from molecular diagnosis of COVID-19 are valuable for better preparedness in response to other infectious diseases.