Thursday 23 October 2014

Nigerians unearth 30 minutes test to detect Ebola


A group of Nigerian scientists in the Diaspora has validated and adapted a widely-published methodology for gene amplification in 30minutes, in order to achieve the detection of Ebola in record time. Unlike the current, widely used method of detecting Ebola virus genes called RT-PCR (Reverse Transcription – Polymerase Chain Reaction, the new bio-innovation method excludes all those long processes to proceed with gene amplification in just one step at a single temperature. Continue...



“With the use of a water bath or a dry heating block, the Bio-innovation method for the detection of Ebola viral genes in a sample can be achieved in resource-limited laboratories in Africa,” said Olumide Adenmosun, an alumnus of Florida Atlantic University, USA and currently visiting associate lecturer to Bowen University, Nigeria.

Nigeria successfully contained its Ebola outbreak since Patrick Sawyer introduced it on July 20, arriving at the Muritala Mohammed International Airport already symptomatic. It led to a total of 20 cases, eight deaths and 12 discharges. Nigeria has not had any new case since September 2014 and was officially declared Ebola-free on Monday October 20, 2014, by the World Health Organisation (WHO). However, the epidemic still persists in other West African countries, including Liberia, Guinea and Sierra-Leone, where the death toll has risen to more than 4,000.

Adenmosun attributed some of the reasons for Nigeria’s success at containing Ebola to strict adherence to public health protocols on contact tracing and monitoring, and readily-available diagnostic points coordinated by two reference laboratories situated in academic institutions Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) and Redeemers University (RUN). “These institutions were able to provide provisional diagnosis by the current gold standard – the RT-PCR method. Though it is such a tedious time-consuming laboratory process, suspected subjects were still being assessed and kept under surveillance through the period of the outbreak in Nigeria,” he said. However, since the outbreak still persists in other West African countries, Nigeria and the rest of Africa may still be at risk – from seemingly innocent asymptomatic subjects that may slip through the ports of entry undetected, just like the case currently being encountered in the USA.

The current bio-surveillance measures utilise a questionnaire-based screening tool and a non-contact temperature check to track the onset of symptoms typical for Ebola Virus Disease. With a rapid genetic test at all ports of entries, all potential may be figured out and referred to isolation units for further observation and treatment. Adenmosun is coordinating technical support for the ongoing clinical and research programme in Nigeria, with the support of other Nigerian scientists and health groups largely involved in the containment of Ebola outbreak. He has been collaborating with Bioinnovation Solutions, Switzerland – a medical diagnostic company led by Dr. Yemi Adesokan, a Harvard trained scientist – to develop the right testing solution that can be adapted for Nigeria and the rest of West Africa. In September of this year, Dr. Adesokan joined the US Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID) to publish a study on the use of genetic sequencing-based technologies to detect Ebola and Marburg viruses. With a strong technical support team on ground, the Bioinnovation rapid genetic tests are being proposed for use at all ports of entry and equally at secondary and tertiary health care institutions to keep up with biosurveillance especially during this period of the year when cross-border travel peaks.

Each test kit will be able to run 48 samples quite easily with no need for expert training or acquisition of next-gene sequencing or amplification equipment. He said the access point for the test kits in Nigeria would be through May & Baker in the coming weeks, enthusing that this exciting collaboration involving Nigerian scientists will truly help the Nigeria to remain Ebola free.


Source: The Cable

No comments:

Post a Comment