Washington: Testing for the presence of a single immune system molecule on nasal swabs can help detect hidden viruses not identified in standard tests, according to a study published in The Lancet Microbe journal. As seen during the COVID-19 pandemic, potentially dangerous new viruses can begin to spread in the population well before the global public health surveillance system can detect them.
"Finding a dangerous new virus is like searching for a needle in a haystack," said Ellen Foxman, an associate professor at Yale University in the US. "We found a way to significantly reduce the size of the haystack," said Foxman, a senior author of the study. Public health officials typically look to a few sources for warning signs of emerging disease. They study emerging viruses in animals that may transmit the infection to humans.
However, determining which of the so many new viral variants represent a true danger is difficult. They also look for outbreaks of unexplained respiratory ailments, which was how SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, was discovered in China late in 2019. However, by the time an outbreak of a novel virus occurs, it may be too late to contain its spread.
Nasal swabs are commonly taken from patients with suspected respiratory infections and are tested to detect specific signatures of 10 to 15 known viruses. Most tests come back negative. However, as Foxman's team observed previously, in a few cases, the swabs of those who tested negative for the "usual suspect" viruses still exhibited signs that antiviral defenses were activated, indicating the presence of a virus. The telltale sign was a high level of a single antiviral protein made by the cells that line the nasal passages.