CovidResearchTrials by Shray Alag


CovidResearchTrials Covid 19 Research using Clinical Trials (Home Page)


Public Health England Gold StandardWiki

Developed by Shray Alag
Clinical Trial MeSH HPO Drug Gene SNP Protein Mutation


Correlated Drug Terms (5)


Name (Synonyms) Correlation
drug2123 SAMBA II (Diagnostic for the Real World) Wiki 1.00
drug27 25-OH cholecalciferol Wiki 1.00
drug510 Cambridge Validated Viral Detection Method Wiki 1.00
drug2720 Zinc gluconate Wiki 1.00
drug2019 Radiological Detection Wiki 1.00

Correlated MeSH Terms (3)


Name (Synonyms) Correlation
D000208 Acute Disease NIH 0.71
D014777 Virus Diseases NIH 0.12
D018352 Coronavirus Infections NIH 0.04

Correlated HPO Terms (0)


Name (Synonyms) Correlation

There is one clinical trial.

Clinical Trials


1 Evaluation of Novel Diagnostic Tests for 2019-nCOV

COVID-19 (also known as Coronavirus) originated in the Wuhan China and has since spread to at least 159 countries around the world. It was declared a pandemic by the World health organisation on the 11th of March 2020. The cases in the United Kingdom continue to increase exponentially with up to 5 683 people diagnosed as on the 22nd of March 2020. It is estimated that 1 in 5 people diagnosed will require hospital admission and 1 in 20 intensive care treatment. By developing and improving diagnostic testing, we can accurately diagnose infected cases to triage appropriate treatments, identify individuals for quarantine in order to prevent transmission and obtain information regarding patient's immune systems. At present, the diagnostic test is a highly specific method of genetic amplification called 'Reverse Transcription - Polymerase Chain Reaction' or RT-PCR, which allows detection of very small amounts of genetic mutations caused by the COVID-19 virus. However, this method must be completed in highly specialised facilities, which are few and far between, increasing time to diagnosis (currently 48-72 hours), increasing exposure to non-infected individuals, and overburdening the analysing facilities. The ideal solution is a point of care (POC) test that can give results immediately. This study aims to harness the point of care technology of the SAMBA II device (Diagnostics for the Real World Ltd.), which is a CE-marked device that has been used with success in the identification of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), by amplifying genetic material without the need to increase and decrease temperatures during the amplification process. In the COVIDx study, 200 patients meeting the Public Health England's (PHE) inpatient definition of having suspected COVID-19 will be approached, consented and a sample from throat and nasal swab (combined) or tracheal fluid taken and tested using the SAMBA II method. A combination of the standard PHE RT-PCR and an additional validated laboratory PCR technique will be used as a control in line with standard clinical practice. Patients will undergo an additional serum tests on existing samples as made available after routine clinical assessments to monitor antibody response. Patients will be followed for clinical outcomes at 28 days post-admission.

NCT04326387 Acute Disease Coronavirus Respiratory Viral Infection Diagnostic Test: SAMBA II (Diagnostic for the Real World) Diagnostic Test: Public Health England Gold Standard Diagnostic Test: Cambridge Validated Viral Detection Method Diagnostic Test: Radiological Detection
MeSH:Coronavirus Infections Acute Disease Virus Diseases

Primary Outcomes

Description: Measuring the diagnostic accuracy of the SAMBA II POC-sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), negative predictive value (NPV) tested against a dual composite reference standard

Measure: SAMBA COVID-19 POC PCR Test

Time: 28 days

Secondary Outcomes

Description: Evaluating the participant acceptability of the SAMBA swab intervention using a participant reported discomfort scale

Measure: Patient acceptability

Time: 28 days

Description: Time to positive IgM/IgG test positivity

Measure: Immune Response Positivity

Time: 40 days


No related HPO nodes (Using clinical trials)