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Avalilação PREreview de High Sensitivity of the BioNote Anigen™ Rapid Rabies Antigen Test in Detection of Diverse Rabies Virus Variants Suggests Utility for Global Rabies Control

Publicado
DOI
10.5281/zenodo.17633171
Licença
CC0 1.0

This preprint evaluates the performance of the BioNote Anigen Rapid Rabies Antigen Test across a wide diversity of rabies virus variants, including both classical and atypical lineages. The authors report high sensitivity and specificity of the assay compared to gold-standard diagnostic methods, such as the direct fluorescent antibody (DFA) test and RT-qPCR. The study addresses an important global health issue: rabies remains a neglected zoonotic disease with nearly 60,000 human deaths annually, and accurate, field-deployable diagnostics are crucial for controlling transmission in low-resource regions. The paper is therefore both timely and globally relevant.

Some major issues that stood out to me relate to the scope and validation of the testing approach. The study involves a large number of geographically and genetically diverse RABV samples, but it would be helpful if the authors clarified how representative these samples are of the global viral diversity—especially from under-sampled regions in Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. This would strengthen the claim of “global utility.” Additionally, while sensitivity and specificity values are impressive, the statistical treatment of confidence intervals could be expanded to show the robustness of performance across variant subgroups.

Another concern is the reliance on postmortem animal brain samples, which may not fully reflect the performance of the test in real-time surveillance or field-deployable conditions (e.g., testing in decomposed carcasses or non-invasive oral fluid samples). The authors briefly mention potential use in point-of-care (POC) surveillance, but there are no real-world deployment data presented to support this. Future studies might validate the test’s performance under operational field conditions, including storage stability, temperature effects, and cross-reactivity with other lyssaviruses.

Overall, the manuscript is well-written, methodologically sound, and provides valuable data that could significantly impact rabies control efforts. Addressing the representativeness of the tested variants, including a broader discussion of field performance parameters, and clarifying statistical robustness would strengthen the conclusions and enhance its translational value for global rabies surveillance programs.

Competing interests

The author declares that they have no competing interests.

Use of Artificial Intelligence (AI)

The author declares that they used generative AI to come up with new ideas for their review.