Field-deployable, Quantitative, Rapid Identification of Active Ebola Virus Infection in Unprocessed Blood.

K. Shah, D. Edge, C. Bruce, E. Bentley, J. Pitman, S. Moschos, J. Burton, D. Norwood, A. Tyler, N. Nazareth, L. Usher, C. Cleaver, D. Lee, L. Easterbrook, M. Lee, E. Wright, K. Richards
25
September
2017
Output type
Journal article
Location
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Focus areas
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Topics
Ebola
Programme
Humanitarian Research
Organisations
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The West African Ebola virus outbreak underlined the importance of delivering mass diagnostic capability outside the clinical or primary care setting in effectively containing public health emergencies caused by infectious disease. Yet, to date, there is no solution for reliably deploying at the point of need the gold standard diagnostic method, real time quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR), in a laboratory infrastructure-free manner. In this proof of principle work, we demonstrate direct performance of RT-qPCR on fresh blood using far-red fluorophores to resolve fluorogenic signal inhibition and controlled, rapid freeze/thawing to achieve viral genome extraction in a single reaction chamber assay. The resulting process is entirely free of manual or automated sample pre-processing, requires no microfluidics or magnetic/mechanical sample handling and thus utilizes low cost consumables. This enables a fast, laboratory infrastructure-free, minimal risk and simple standard operating procedure suited to frontline, field use.

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Ebola
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