Can the detection dog alert on COVID-19 positive persons by sniffing axillary sweat samples? A proof-of-concept study

Author:

Grandjean DominiqueORCID,Sarkis Riad,Lecoq-Julien Clothilde,Benard Aymeric,Roger Vinciane,Levesque Eric,Bernes-Luciani Eric,Maestracci Bruno,Morvan PascalORCID,Gully Eric,Berceau-Falancourt David,Haufstater Pierre,Herin Gregory,Cabrera Joaquin,Muzzin Quentin,Gallet Capucine,Bacqué Hélène,Broc Jean-Marie,Thomas Leo,Lichaa AnthonyORCID,Moujaes Georges,Saliba Michele,Kuhn Aurore,Galey Mathilde,Berthail Benoit,Lapeyre Lucien,Capelli Anthoni,Renault Steevens,Bachir Karim,Kovinger Anthony,Comas Eric,Stainmesse Aymeric,Etienne Erwan,Voeltzel Sébastien,Mansouri Sofiane,Berceau-Falancourt Marlène,Dami Aimé,Charlet Lary,Ruau Eric,Issa Mario,Grenet Carine,Billy Christophe,Tourtier Jean-Pierre,Desquilbet Loïc

Abstract

The aim of this proof-of-concept study was to evaluate if trained dogs could discriminate between sweat samples from symptomatic COVID-19 positive individuals (SARS-CoV-2 PCR positive) and those from asymptomatic COVID-19 negative individuals. The study was conducted at 2 sites (Paris, France, and Beirut, Lebanon), followed the same training and testing protocols, and involved six detection dogs (three explosive detection dogs, one search and rescue dog, and two colon cancer detection dogs). A total of 177 individuals were recruited for the study (95 symptomatic COVID-19 positive and 82 asymptomatic COVID-19 negative individuals) from five hospitals, and one underarm sweat sample per individual was collected. The dog training sessions lasted between one and three weeks. Once trained, the dog had to mark the COVID-19 positive sample randomly placed behind one of three or four olfactory cones (the other cones contained at least one COVID-19 negative sample and between zero and two mocks). During the testing session, a COVID-19 positive sample could be used up to a maximum of three times for one dog. The dog and its handler were both blinded to the COVID-positive sample location. The success rate per dog (i.e., the number of correct indications divided by the number of trials) ranged from 76% to 100%. The lower bound of the 95% confidence interval of the estimated success rate was most of the time higher than the success rate obtained by chance after removing the number of mocks from calculations. These results provide some evidence that detection dogs may be able to discriminate between sweat samples from symptomatic COVID-19 individuals and those from asymptomatic COVID-19 negative individuals. However, due to the limitations of this proof-of-concept study (including using some COVID-19 samples more than once and potential confounding biases), these results must be confirmed in validation studies.

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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