Passive Detection- SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) A&M Breathalyzer (PROTECT Kiosk) for Operational Medicine

Purpose

The primary objective of this effort will be to optimize and operationalize innovative passive surveillance systems and in parallel, the effort will identify, evaluate, and transition groundbreaking new technologies in diagnostics for operationalization. To meet the objective and execute the deliverables for this program of effort, the A&M Breathalyzer PROTECT Kiosk will be tested, modified and validated at Brooke Army Medical Center (BAMC). The collaborative efforts between the PI, Dr. Michael Morris at BAMC and Co-Investigator Dr. Tony Yuan at USU- Center for Biotechnology (4D Bio3) will assess the passive detection technology and provide a capability survey of use-case scenarios for different operational settings. Goals: 1. Optimization and operationalize the A&M Breathalyzer PROTECT Kiosk, portable mass spectrometer (MS) Detector for Deployment in Military Operational Medicine Environments. The Breathalyzer will be deployed to BAMC to test its detection capabilities of COVID-19 among symptomatic and asymptomatic COVID-19 carrier vs. those not infected compared to gold standard RT-PCR. 2. Evaluate the passive sensing, breath capture system, built within the A&M Breathalyzer PROTECT Kiosk. The conversion of the active breath capture system, currently requires a straw that the subject breaths into, where then a series of sensors built in the Breathalyzer would automatically sample the exhaled breath within proximity for recent COVID-19 exposure. This task would conclude with a set of sensors and sensor inputs that would be analyzed by the Atomic AI platform built in the device. Field testing at BAMC is planned to determine the level of detection and discrimination for sensor combinations to SARS-CoV2 components and biomarkers detected. This testing would update the Atomic AI algorithm, within the device, to understand the accuracy of positive detection and the resulting sensitivities.

Conditions

  • COVID-19
  • SARS CoV 2 Virus
  • COVID-19 Pneumonia
  • COVID-19 Respiratory Infection
  • COVID-19 Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Between 18 Years and 89 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Inclusion Criteria

  • Asymptomatic and symptomatic individuals 18 years and older - Receiving standard COVID-19 screening and testing at BAMC - Do not have to be diagnosed with SARS-CoV-19 (COVID-19) but only be screened - Ability to understand consent

Exclusion Criteria

  • Any individual under age of 18 - Anyone unable to comply (or be assisted) with study procedures - Anyone not able to provide temperature thermal scan, and/or perform exhaled breath for approximately 8 seconds

Study Design

Phase
Study Type
Observational
Observational Model
Case-Control
Time Perspective
Prospective

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
COVID-19 positive patients Participants screened with known COVID-19 positive results obtained within 48 hours of recruitment.
  • Device: A&M Breathalyzer PROTECT Kiosk
    The A&M Breathalyzer PROTECT Kiosk will collect the mass spectrum breath readings from each participant, scan speed, and will autoanalyze noise and scan thresholds and sensitivity data.
    Other names:
    • Breathalyzer
COVID-19 negative patients Participants screened with known COVID-19 negative results obtained within 48 hours of recruitment.
  • Device: A&M Breathalyzer PROTECT Kiosk
    The A&M Breathalyzer PROTECT Kiosk will collect the mass spectrum breath readings from each participant, scan speed, and will autoanalyze noise and scan thresholds and sensitivity data.
    Other names:
    • Breathalyzer

Recruiting Locations

Brooke Army Medical Center
Fort Sam Houston, Texas 78234
Contact:
Katherine Walker-Rodriguez, MSN
210-378-3057
katherine.c.walker-rodriguez.ctr@health.mil

More Details

NCT ID
NCT06402318
Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
The Geneva Foundation

Study Contact

Tony Yuan, PhD
214-292-0508
tony.yuan@usuhs.edu

Detailed Description

Emerging acute respiratory diseases (ARDs) pose a significant threat for the US military, especially among those in training environments where crowded living conditions and demanding multi-factorial stresses exacerbate infection exposure and suppress immunity, respectively. Consequently, ARD rates are routinely reported higher in recruits than older military personnel, which have a detrimental effect on operational readiness. Although significant steps, such as surveillance and vaccine programs, have been taken to minimize the impact that ARDs have on military recruits and newly mobilized troops, hospitalizations among recruits still exceeds that of comparable civilian population in the United States by at least 3- to 4-folds, accounting for almost 30% of all infectious disease associated hospitalizations. In 2018, respiratory infections like respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), accounted for an estimated 50,000 medical encounters affecting about ~35,000 recruits that resulted in 1,000 hospital bed days leading to significant loss in training time and cost. In addition to annual respiratory infections, the on-going COVID-19 numbers rising again, continues to threaten to further degrade operational readiness. Thus, inexpensive, rapid, and more reliable diagnostics are continually required to better treat and prevent ARDs to preserve military readiness and decrease disability adjusted life years. Current CLIA laboratory diagnostic procedures, such Enzyme Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA), Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR), and bacterial cultures, are costly, time-consuming, and operator sensitive. It has become apparent that during the COVID-19 pandemic, these approaches were and continue to be insufficient in meeting diagnostic needs as they are difficult to scale-up and lack logistical flexibility. Furthermore, due to the invasive nature of active clinical sampling, there is a critical need for accurate and rapid passive surveillance as to screen for SARS-CoV-19 as well as other hazardous chemical and biological agents. To address this capability gap, the current project will: 1) modify and operationalize existing innovative passive surveillance systems that can be deployed in the near-term; 2) leverage revolutionary technologies that will enhance current diagnostic systems to meet mid- and far-term gaps in CBRNE gaps.