New T-cell test is EIGHT TIMES better at detecting whether a patient had COVID than antibody tests, study claims
- The new test looks for T-cells, a type of white blood cells that binds to and kills viruses, to determine if someone was infected with coronavirus in the past
- In a pre-print study, researchers tested at samples from 2,200 people in Vo, Italy, with the T-cell test and with the antibody test
- Of the 70 people who had confirmed cases of COVID-19, the T-cell test correctly identified 97% of cases and the antibody test correctly identified 77% of case
- Of the more than 2,000 people who tested negative for the virus, the T cell test also returned positive results for 45 people
A new type of test may be more effective at determining whether someone already had coronavirus compared to widely-used antibody tests.
The test looks for immune cells called T-cells, which are a type of white blood cell that binds to and kills viruses.
New research from the manufacturer, Adaptive Biotechnologies, which is based in Seattle, found that the test was eight times better at detecting past COVID-19 infection than a commercially available antibody test.
Immunologists say the pre-print study still needs to be peer reviewed, but the results look promising and could replace antibody tests as a way to discover how widespread the virus is in a community.
A new type of test looks for T-cells (pictured), a type of white blood cells that binds to and kills viruses, to determine if someone was infected with coronavirus in the past
Of the 70 people who had confirmed cases of COVID-19, the T cell test correctly identified 97% of cases and the antibody test correctly identified 77% of cases. Pictured: Medical staff members treat a patient suffering from coronavirus in the COVID-19 ICU at the United Memorial Medical Center in Houston, Texas, November 2020
When someone is exposed to a virus, different parts of the immune system are called to fight it off including antibodies and other immune cells.
Most of the attention has been focused on antibodies because testing for them is fast and inexpensive. But they usually diminish over time.
‘The source of the antibodies – the factory that makes them – dies off within a few months,’ Dr Akiko Iwasaki, an immunologist at the Yale School of Medicine, told CNN.
Recent research, on the other hand, has found T-cells may be sufficient enough to offer protection against the virus.
‘For other viruses they’ve been shown to persist for years. For this virus we don’t know how long they last, but we would expect for a couple of years at least,’ Iwasaki said.
A study published on Tuesday from the UK, conducted by Oxford Immunotec and Public Health England, found that no participants with a high T-cell response developed symptoms when infected with COVID-19.
By comparison, 20 people with low T-cell responses, who experienced fever, cough or shortness of breath.
However, isolating T-cells is very time consuming because there are trillions of them that each recognize a different molecule and scientists have to identify the 20 or 30 that recognize the coronavirus.
After separating immune cells from blood samples, the cells are washed and counted.
Each one is exposed to pieces of the virus to see which ones have an immunological response to it.
For the research, which has not been published yet and was not funded by Adaptive, the team looked at samples from 2,200 people in Vo, Italy – which became the epicenter of the pandemic in its region of Veneto.
Of the 70 people who had had confirmed cases of coronavirus, the test, called T-Detect, correctly identified 97 percent of cases, only missing two of them.
By comparison, a commercial antibody test called DiaSorin only correctly identified 77 percent of cases, missing 16 of them.
This means the test is eight times more effective at determining whether or not someone was previously infected with COVID-19.
What’s more, of more than 2,000 people who tested negative for the virus, the T cell test returned positive results for 45 people.
Dr Lance Baldo, the chief medical office at Adaptive and coauthor on the paper, told CNN that believes most of the 45 people never realized they were infected.
About half of them either had mild symptoms or had lived with someone tested positive for COVID-19, or both.
Adaptive said it is planning this month to file an application for Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) from the US Food and Drug Administration.
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