Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
| NCT number |
NCT05308550 |
| Other study ID # |
56505 |
| Secondary ID |
283408 |
| Status |
Completed |
| Phase |
N/A
|
| First received |
|
| Last updated |
|
| Start date |
May 27, 2020 |
| Est. completion date |
February 27, 2021 |
Study information
| Verified date |
April 2022 |
| Source |
University of Southampton |
| Contact |
n/a |
| Is FDA regulated |
No |
| Health authority |
|
| Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
A new Rapid RNA test for Covid-19 has been developed by Professor Cui and his team at the
Department of Engineering Science at the University of Oxford. This can give results in 30
minutes which is much faster than the routine PCR test, which often takes 2-3 days to produce
results. In this study we aim to establish the sensitivity of the rapid RNA test, which has
never before been evaluated clinically. Preliminary anecdotal evidence suggests that the test
is easy to use and appears to give valid results. This initial trial aims to establish
whether the sensitivity of this tests is above the threshold of 90%. We aim to include at
least 173 patients with symptoms of Covid-19 in Watford General Hospital.
Description:
Rapid, accurate diagnosis of Covid-19 would greatly help to improve clinical management of
patients presenting with symptoms of possible Covid-19. Currently, results of the standard
test for the virus take 2-3 days to be reported. The University of Oxford Institute of
Biomedical Engineering has designed a new test, which can produce results in 30 minutes. This
uses a nasal/throat swab like the current standard test.
In the first phase of the trial, the swab was sent to the laboratory in a dry tube. In the
laboratory, the swab was put into a vial of 1 mL water, and a small amount (25 µL) of the
water was put into a test tube. This test tube contained materials which can detect the
presence of the novel Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2). The test tube is then simply warmed to 65°C
for 30 minutes, and if the Coronavirus is present, the reagent will change colour from pink
to yellow (positive). If there is no virus present in the sample, the colour remains pink
(negative). This is designed to be a very simple test that does not need specialist skills or
equipment, and so could be carried out in hospitals and even in primary care. In this study
we aimed to evaluate the accuracy of this new test. We planned to take a second swab from
patients with suspected Covid-19 at Watford General hospital (who were being tested anyway)
and to use these swabs to conduct the new test (in ideal laboratory conditions) as well as
the standard test. As we were not sure of the accuracy of the new test, its results were not
used to make decisions about treatment for the patient. In the initial cohort of 173
patients, Discrepancies were noted with some samples when compared to reference lab results.
We then investigated whether the patients who had a positive rapid RNA test, but a negative
"gold standard" test, were true positives, by inviting them to have an antibody test. This
revealed that 20 of 161 patients with a negative reference test had a false positive result
on the rapid test. These false positives may result from interfering substances in the
clinical samples, which affect the colorimetric detection based on pH changes.
In view of these first results and feedback, the Oxford team made a number of modifications
to the rapid test:
1. Viral inactivation - the swab is placed in saline and heated at 95°C for 5 mins - which
kills the virus and makes it safe to use at the point of care
2. The sample is diluted 1 in 10 to avoid interaction with saliva
3. A "molecular switch" was added to avoid false positives.
The diagnostic accuracy of the modified test was then evaluated. We invited patients who were
being screened, and patients who had been screened and found to be positive, to take part in
this study. As the prevalence of COVID-19 amongst tested patients was lower than we had
estimated when calculating the sample size (only 12 of 173 were positive on the reference
test), the sample was increased by a further 300 patients. We aimed to discover rapidly
whether the modified test is accurate.
The rapid RNA test has the potential to be a useful screening tool if it acquires comparable
sensitivity to the current "gold standard" with a rapid and feasible approach.