Bioaerosol Sampling in Clinical Settings: A Promising, Noninvasive Approach for Detecting Respiratory Viruses

Author:

Nguyen Tham T.1,Poh Mee K.1,Low Jenny2,Kalimuddin Shirin2,Thoon Koh C.13,Ng Wai C.4,Anderson Benjamin D.5,Gray Gregory C.15

Affiliation:

1. Program in Emerging Infectious Diseases, Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapore

2. Department of Infectious Diseases, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore

3. Department of Paediatrics, Infectious Disease Service, KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital, Singapore

4. SingHealth Polyclinic, Singapore

5. Division of Infectious Diseases, Global Health Institute, and Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina

Abstract

Abstract Background Seeking a noninvasive method to conduct surveillance for respiratory pathogens, we sought to examine the usefulness of 2 types of off-the-shelf aerosol samplers to detect respiratory viruses in Singapore. Methods In this pilot study, we ran the aerosol samplers several times each week with patients present in the patient waiting areas at 3 primary health clinics during the months of April and May 2016. We used a SKC BioSampler with a BioLite Air Sampling Pump (run for 60 min at 8 L/min) and SKC AirChek TOUCH personal air samplers with polytetrafluoroethylene Teflon filter cassettes (run for 180 min at 5 L/min). The aerosol specimens and controls were studied with molecular assays for influenza A virus, influenza B virus, adenoviruses, and coronaviruses. Results Overall, 16 (33.3%) of the 48 specimens indicated evidence of at least 1 respiratory pathogen, with 1 (2%) positive for influenza A virus, 3 (6%) positive for influenza B virus, and 12 (25%) positive for adenovirus. Conclusions Although we were not able to correlate molecular detection with individual patient illness, patients with common acute respiratory illnesses were present during the samplings. Combined with molecular assays, it would suggest that aerosol sampling has potential as a noninvasive method for novel respiratory virus detection in clinical settings.

Funder

2015 MINDEF-NUS Joint Applied R&D Cooperation Programme

SingHealth Foundation Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Oncology

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