Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
| NCT number |
NCT05216627 |
| Other study ID # |
850592 |
| Secondary ID |
|
| Status |
Completed |
| Phase |
|
| First received |
|
| Last updated |
|
| Start date |
February 7, 2022 |
| Est. completion date |
July 1, 2022 |
Study information
| Verified date |
November 2022 |
| Source |
University of Pennsylvania |
| Contact |
n/a |
| Is FDA regulated |
No |
| Health authority |
|
| Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
In view of the recent COVID surge and difficulties in obtaining testing, we aim to increase
Point of Care (POC) testing, whereby University of Pennsylvania (Penn) faculty, staff, and
trainees who are working in person at Perelman School of Medicine (PSOM) laboratories can
self-test. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the implementation of this POC testing
program. We will not be collecting any samples as part of this study. This will ensure that
individuals can rapidly identify if they have COVID-19 while balancing use, acceptability,
appropriateness, and feasibility. We will start with a pilot phase whereby we will evaluate
the implementation of a POC version of COVID-19 screening program that will coordinate
several existing systems at the University of Pennsylvania including voluntary,
self-administered saliva-based viral testing. We will pilot this program to a small cohort of
PSOM labs and then test implementation of the self-testing of the POC version of COVID-19
screening across all PSOM labs for those who wish to participate. All results will be
self-reported and will not be used to validate any tests or support any future approval from
the FDA. No data from this study will go into the participants' Electronic Medical Record
(EMR).
Description:
Background: The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has resulted in close to 300,000,000
reported cases worldwide, including more than 58,000,000 reported cases and 800,000 deaths in
the United States [1,2]. Initial efforts to address the COVID-19 pandemic were aimed at
testing symptomatic individuals, implementing stay-in-place orders, and at increasing
hospital capacity to meet surge demands [3]. Currently, we are going through an unprecedented
surge in the total number of cases - mostly due to the spread of the Omicron variant. While
we continue to confront the current crisis, a complete lockdown as seen in 2020 is not
desirable or being planned. We must address the current issue and also plan for the future by
putting in place tools to enhance our ability to conduct effective screening, containment,
and case management. Future variants may cause similar delays in testing availability.
Widespread COVID-19 testing is needed to safely and effectively operate schools, workplaces,
and businesses across the US. However, currently approved clinical testing options require
reagents that are limited in supply and expensive quantitative polymerase chain reaction
(qPCR) machines, severely hindering scalability [4] coupled with acute shortage of
person-power. In response to limited clinical testing options, rapid antigen tests that are
available to purchase over-the-counter and can be self-administered have become recently a
popular testing approach; however, these tests are expensive, in short supply, and may not be
as sensitive in detecting Omicron variant compared to polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests
[5]. Emerging evidence indicates that saliva testing with the option of self-administration
of testing can accurately identify COVID-19 viral infection [6]. Moreover, this approach
provides an option for the easy, safe and convenient collection of samples required for
testing without traveling to a doctor's office, hospital, or testing site. Point of care
testing (i.e. using saliva-based self-collection to administer screening for COVID-19 in
one's own laboratory setting) utilizes testing equipment that is readily available to our
workforce, leverages their existing training, and benefits from existing institutional health
and safety infrastructure.
Self-administration of saliva testing also reduces exposure of health care workers to the
virus and preserves limited personal protective equipment [7]. Additional diagnostic testing
options will continue to increase staff access.
For these reasons, we propose to evaluate the implementation of a COVID-19 POC screening
program that uses saliva-based self-testing and to pilot test approaches to improve program
enrollment.
Objective: The primary objective of the study is to evaluate the use, acceptability,
appropriateness, and feasibility of implementing a voluntary COVID-19 Point of Care (POC)
screening program with Penn faculty, staff, and trainees that uses saliva-based
self-collection followed by testing in their own PSOM laboratories. A secondary objective is
to learn about self-reported test results, program usability, user burden, participant
experience, program ease, program continuation and availability. Another secondary objective
is to learn about individual's perspectives about the program.
Study Design: This is an implementation clinical trial that we anticipate lasting up to two
months. In the first phase, we will pilot the approach with four PSOM laboratories. We plan
to enroll up to 50 people across these labs during the pilot phase. Labs will be located on
Penn campus. We will pilot test the best manner to distribute saliva collection test kits and
assay tests to participants and elicit rapid feedback for one week. We will apply feedback in
real time to improve the distribution method. In the second phase, we will roll out the
clinical trial more broadly across all interested PSOM laboratories. We anticipate enrolling
up to 500 participants across all PSOM laboratories. All participants will be Penn employees
(faculty, staff, and trainees) who work in a PSOM laboratory.
All participants will be required to provide informed consent and watch a training video
before self-collecting their first saliva sample. All participants will be told they can
collect saliva samples as much or as little as they want - but no more than daily for up to
four weeks. They will also be asked to complete online surveys weekly for up to four weeks.
These surveys are expected to take about 15 minutes to complete. See below for table of
survey measures and frequency. A subset of participants will also be asked to participate in
a one-time qualitative interview after the point of care testing program is over. This
interview is expected to take about 30 minutes.