尼日利亚COVID-19分子诊断:当前实践、挑战和机遇

Seyi Samson Enita
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引用次数: 1

摘要

自2020年2月27日首次报告病例以来,尼日利亚的2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)确诊病例和死亡人数继续大幅上升。截至2020年8月25日;尼日利亚是西非次区域COVID-19疫情最严重的国家(52800人),仅次于非洲大陆的南非(613017人)。在缺乏有效和安全疫苗的情况下,及时准确诊断对控制大流行至关重要。诊断检测可以跟踪病毒,了解其流行病学,为病例管理提供信息,阻断和抑制其传播。尽管目前正在开发几种用于诊断COVID-19的血清学方法,并正在对其进行验证,但目前尼日利亚唯一授权的COVID-19诊断检测平台是使用实时聚合酶链反应(RT-PCR)对鼻拭子、咽拭子或其他呼吸道标本进行核酸检测。不幸的是,由于其低分子检测能力,该国的检测力度不够。缺乏充分的检测已被确定为我们没有看到该国疫情真实情况的主要原因。实际上,COVID-19病例的累计计数可能比报告的数字高出10倍,因此需要在资源稀缺的情况下扩大国家分子检测能力。本文综述了尼日利亚目前在COVID-19分子诊断方面的做法、挑战和机遇。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Molecular Diagnosis of COVID-19 in Nigeria: Current Practices, Challenges and Opportunities
Nigeria has continued to record a dramatic rise in the number of confirmed cases and fatalities of Coronavirus Diseas-2019 (COVID-19) since the first incidence was reported on the 27th of February, 2020. As of 25 August, 2020; Nigeria has the largest COVID-19 outbreak in the West-Africa sub-region (52,800), second to South-Africa (613,017) in the continent. In the absence of an effective and safe vaccine, accurate diagnosis in a timely fashion is very critical to the control of the pandemic. Diagnostic testing allows tracking of the virus, understanding its epidemiology, informing case management, interrupting and suppressing its transmission. Although several serologic methods are being developed and are currently being validated for the diagnosis of COVID-19, the only authorized testing platform for COVID-19 diagnosis in Nigeria as of now is nucleic acid detection in nasal swab, throat swab or other respiratory tract specimen using the Real time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Unfortunately, the country is not testing just enough due to its low molecular testing capacity. Lack of sufficient testing has been identified as the main reason we are not seeing the true picture of the outbreak in the country. In reality, the cumulative counts of COVID-19 cases may be ten times higher than reported, hence the need to scale-up the national molecular testing capacity amidst scarce resources. This review takes a look at the current practices, challenges and opportunities for molecular diagnosis of COVID-19 in Nigeria.
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