Sniffing out the pandemic

Meet our labs in lab coats

Anne-Lise Chaber and COVID detector dog

Dogs can sit, stay and roll over, but can our best friends fight Coronavirus?聽According to Dr Anne-Lise Chaber聽and her team, the answer is a聽resounding 鈥測es!鈥澛燗nne-Lise (Senior Lecturer, researcher and dog lover) is leading the Australian arm of an international collaboration, training dogs to detect positive COVID-19 cases.聽

With a decade of field experience as an epidemiologist, Anne-Lise knows that a fast and reliable screening tool is essential to managing聽a pandemic.聽And dogs, with their keen sense of smell and documented ability to detect disease in humans, could be just the tool we need. Presently, Australia鈥檚 health system has two COVID screening devices at its disposal, neither of which are wholly fit for purpose. 鈥淥ur problem is that PCR tests are very reliable, but they鈥檙e not rapid. RAT tests are obviously rapid, but they鈥檙e not very reliable,鈥澛爏aid Anne-Lise.

With a view to facilitating quick identification of positive COVID-19 cases, in 2020 Anne-Lise embarked on a mission to uncover whether dogs are up to the task of rapid and accurate screening. Labradors, known for their work ethic and people-pleasing trait, were identified as an ideal breed聽to train.

In the early stages of the pandemic, research into dogs鈥 ability to detect COVID-19 had indicated encouraging results in France. Dogs can distinguish and remember a vast catalogue of scents and are already employed to sniff out narcotics, weapons and currency at airports and international borders.

Over eight to twelve weeks, Anne-Lise鈥檚 chief dog trainer Alexander Withers first teaches labs to sniff for a 鈥榢ong鈥 (the beloved rubber toy) before they graduate to screening COVID positive and negative sweat samples.

Anne-Lise Chaber and COVID detector dog

Dr Anne-Lise Chaber and a COVID dog in training.

At the outset of the pandemic, sweat became an unexpectedly hot commodity, with COVID-positive sweat samples being shipped to a then largely COVID-free Australia.聽

Sweat is an ideal training material, as it is non-infectious and contains volatile organic compounds which dogs can detect. Later, Anne-Lise鈥檚 team developed a synthetic training aid, a cocktail of proteins applied to objects such as masks or socks for training purposes, removing the need for聽sweat samples.聽

The training methodology is based on core principles of conditioned response and positive reinforcement. The dogs learn to 鈥榮it and stare鈥 when detecting compounds associated with COVID-19, and are rewarded with a toy or food when they correctly identify a case.聽

The results are impressive. Once trained, dogs have displayed a diagnostic sensitivity from 87.6% to 100% (that is, their ability to return a positive result when someone is truly COVID-positive).聽Even more precise is the dogs鈥 diagnostic specificity (their ability to return a negative result when a sample is truly negative), which ranges from 96% to 100%.聽

Anne-Lise said the dogs have a remarkable ability to sniff out the virus and can identify both symptomatic and asymptomatic cases a day earlier than PCR tests, so long as the sample is taken during the infectious period. 鈥淥ur specially trained dogs fill a gap between the two conventional testing methods. They are more reliable than RAT tests, and are faster than PCR tests,鈥 she said.

It begs the question; how and why? Anne-Lise explained that historically, dogs and their wolf relatives have found it advantageous to sniff out weak prey.聽鈥淚t is widely known that predators will target sick prey. They are slower, easier to catch, and may emit an odour that attracts the predator to them,鈥 she said.

Anne-Lise Chaber and COVID detector dog

And when it comes to sniffing out disease, it鈥檚 not just COVID-19 dogs can detect. As early as 1989, anecdotal evidence suggested dogs can sense melanoma and other cancers. Other animals exhibit similar capabilities. Bees are able to detect COVID-19 too, but are predictably more difficult to train than dogs. 鈥淩ats are used to sniff out tuberculosis in samples in Africa, and new research shows they can detect up to 70% more cases in children than the standard smear test,鈥 said Anne-Lise.

Now, our labs in lab coats are putting their training into practice.聽In partnership with SA Health and SA Pathology, Anne-Lise and the 成人大片 have trialled the dogs鈥 abilities in airport settings and have now moved to hospital settings. Future plans include training nurses from SA Pathology to handle the dogs, which would allow the operation to be dramatically upscaled.聽

According to Anne-Lise, expansion of the project is essential because even as we strive towards a new 鈥楥OVID normal,鈥 the dogs still have an important role to play. 鈥淚t鈥檚 true that, as a society, we will have to learn to go about our lives with COVID; but not everyone can live with COVID. We will still need screening tools in places that must remain COVID-free, such as oncology wards,鈥 she said.

Story by Emma Dwyer
Photos by Angus Northeast

Tagged in lumen Spring 2022, lumen