Description
The WHO has declared the COVID-19 epidemic on January 31, 2020. This virus has infected millions of people worldwide in just a few months. Shortly afterward, the National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) announced nucleic acid testing as the gold standard for virus detection. Antibody testing is used as well as a supplementary test for suspected cases where nucleic acid detection was negative. In short, nucleic acid–based polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is the mainstream detection method for clinical samples as well as for the detection of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewaters. First data collected around the globe were reported in the last few months being part of the so-called Wastewater-Based Epidemiology (WBE) approach. Selection of concentration methods and primers, laboratory inter-comparison, and various modalities of PCR detection of the virus in complex wastewater matrices were flagged up as main bullets that require urgent improvement. Novel approaches to enhance sensitivity, speed, and automate streamlined virus detection will be discussed here as well. This list comprises devices mainly used for clinical purposes like Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR), Digital PCR, Lab-on-a-chip (LOC), and related platforms as well as Biosensors. The last part will be devoted to the identification of biomolecules to target the Covid-19 outbreak based on inflammatory response biomarkers among others. To this end, this session brings for discussion the issue of PCR detection and its limitations as well as new diagnostic methods in WBE such as the use of Biosensors, Biomarkers, and Lab-on-a-chip technologies.
Authors are invited to submit their abstracts until 1st June 2021 for the workshop at https://cms.gnest.org.
Important notice: Once the abstract is accepted and the registration is completed, the full papers can be submitted for review in a VSI (Virtual Special Issue) open in Case Studies in Chemical and Environmental Engineering.
Date, time, and agenda: To be announced
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