RRML - Agreement between two diagnostic methods for COVID-19: preliminary data from a Brazilian clinical laboratory
AMLR

ISSN online: 2284-5623

ISSN-L: 1841-6624

Rejection rate (2020): 75%

Română English


Journal Metrics

Impact Factor 0.5
Five Year Impact Factor 0.5
JCI 0.12


Advanced search


Top 10 downloaded articles
- November 2024 -
 
Towards appropriate training f... 31
Recomandările naționale ale ... 28
Biomarkers of acute kidney inj... 23
A comprehensive review of glyc... 20
Agreement between different eG... 19
Investigation of cytokine chan... 19
Expressions of vascular endoth... 17
Role of Th1/Th2 imbalance medi... 16
Small patients, big challenges... 9
The frequency of EGFR gene mut... 8

Log in

Concept, Design & Programming
Dr. Adrian Man

   
 
Nr. 29(4)/2021 DOI:10.2478/rrlm-2021-0026
XML
TXT

Original professional paper

Agreement between two diagnostic methods for COVID-19: preliminary data from a Brazilian clinical laboratory

Joyce Regina Santos Raimundo, Glaucia Luciano Veiga, Beatriz Costa Aguiar Alves, Jéssica Freitas Araújo Encinas, Marina Cristina Peres, Matheus Moreira Perez, Claudia Giorgia Bronzatti de Oliveira Rodrigues, Aleksandra Vanessa Lambiasi Sant’Anna, Flavia Gehrke, Fernando Luiz Affonso Fonseca

Correspondence should be addressed to: Joyce Regina Santos Raimundo

Abstract:

Objective: To investigate possible differences between laboratory profiles of symptomatic and asymptomatic patients. There are different of them available for COVID-19 diagnoses and surveillance, so this research was to evaluate the positive agreement the diagnostic methods. Methods: For symptomatic patients swab samples from nasal and oral mucosal were collected between first and second week after symptoms onset, to perform RT-PCR, blood samples were collected 7 days after to perform antibody detection test. For asymptomatic patients, only antibody detection was performed to confirm the infection. We investigated specific humoral immune response for symptomatic and asymptomatic patients and also analyzed the positivity index and kappa agreement between immunochromatographic and ELISA assays. Results: Most symptomatic patients presented negative RT-PCR with IgM and IgA detection. Symptomatic and asymptomatic patients have presented elevated IgM and IgA immunoglobulins, being this detection higher in symptomatic patients. The positivity index for immunochromatographic was higher than ELISA and there was no kappa agreement between IgM and IgA detection between these two methods. Conclusion: Symptomatic patients presented higher amounts of IgM and IgA than asymptomatic, suggesting a relation between antibody quantity and severity of disease. We verified no agreement between IgM and IgA detection, and observed higher positivity index for IMMUNO when compared to ELISA. The different kinetics may cause a variation in their detection. Also, many different virus proteins can be used as antigens in these methods, being able of altering their sensibility and specificity.

Keywords: COVID-19, symptomatic, diagnostic, asymptomatic

Received: 3.6.2021
Accepted: 6.9.2021
Published: 19.9.2021

 
  PDF Download full text PDF
(389 KB)
     
 
How to cite
Santos Raimundo JR, Veiga GL, Aguiar Alves BC, Araújo Encinas JF, Peres MC, Moreira Perez M, et al. Agreement between two diagnostic methods for COVID-19: preliminary data from a Brazilian clinical laboratory. Rev Romana Med Lab. 2021;29(4):413-20. DOI:10.2478/rrlm-2021-0026