Kihoku Branch Hospital, Wakayama Medical University, Wakayama, Japan
Dr. Toshikazu Kondo is currently a professor of Department of Forensic Medicine, Wakayama Medical University. He graduated from the Medical School in Kanazawa University. Previously, he was a guest researcher in Institute for Legal Medicine at Free University of Berlin as well as at University Munich. His primary interest is in the skin immunology, immunopharmacology as well as tissue repair. The American Association of Immunologists. From 2015 until now, he has been appointed as a president for the Japanese Association of Forensic Pathology.
Research Article
Immunochromatographic SARS-CoV-2 IgG Antibody Assay: A Cross-Sectional Study Conducted at Wakayama Medical University in Japan
Author(s): Sadahiro Iwabuchi, Masahiro Katsuda, Yusuke Koizumi, Mayuko Hatai, Mitsue Kojima, Nahomi Tokudome, Shinobu Tamura, Machiko Nishio, Toshikazu Kondo, Masaya Hironisi, Chiemi Kakutani, Hiroki Yamaue and Shinichi Hashimoto*
Asymptomatic patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection must be quickly
identified and isolated to prevent the spread of the virus. The number of asymptomatic healthy people is completely
unknown because they remain untested. Detection of specific SARS-CoV-2 antibodies has been widely accepted as a
diagnostic test, and an immunochromatographic test, which is simpler and relatively cheaper than other methods, is
becoming the gold standard for identifying healthy people who had been infected with SARS-CoV-2 in the past. In
this study, 1,528 volunteers who worked at a particular hospital were subjected to an immunochromatographic IgG
test for SARS-CoV-2 to determine the ratio of asymptomatic people. Only 12 volunteers (0.79%) were IgG+, with no
significant background differences in the sex, age, profession, experience.. View More»