| Winston A. Haynes, Kathy Kamath, Joel Bozekowski, Elisabeth Baum-Jones, Melissa Campbell, Arnau Casanovas-Massana, Patrick S. Daugherty, Charles S. Dela Cruz, Abhilash Dhal, Shelli F. Farhadian, Lynn Fitzgibbons, John Fournier, Michael Jhatro, Gregory Jordan, Debra Kessler, Jon Klein, Carolina Lucas, Larry L. Luchsinger, Brian Martinez, Mary C. Muenker, Lauren Pischel, Jack Reifert, Jaymie R. Sawyer, Rebecca Waitz, Elsio A. Wunder Jr., Minlu Zhang, Yale IMPACT Team, Akiko Iwasaki, Albert I. Ko, John C. Shon | | Winston A. Haynes, Kathy Kamath, Joel Bozekowski, Elisabeth Baum-Jones, Melissa Campbell, Arnau Casanovas-Massana, Patrick S. Daugherty, Charles S. Dela Cruz, Abhilash Dhal, Shelli F. Farhadian, Lynn Fitzgibbons, John Fournier, Michael Jhatro, Gregory Jordan, Debra Kessler, Jon Klein, Carolina Lucas, Larry L. Luchsinger, Brian Martinez, Mary C. Muenker, Lauren Pischel, Jack Reifert, Jaymie R. Sawyer, Rebecca Waitz, Elsio A. Wunder Jr., Minlu Zhang, Yale IMPACT Team, Akiko Iwasaki, Albert I. Ko, John C. Shon |
− | The study returns research-grade results (not intended for diagnostic clinical use) to participants. As described in the [https://serimmune.com/caspio-content/COVID-19-Study-Consent-Form-and-Bill-of-Rights-Preview.pdf study consent document], these results are not clinically validated and not meant to serve as a clinical assay. They are, nevertheless, interesting to look at!
| + | Next, they compare this individual's epitope with others taken from people with known exposure to specific infections. Theoretically, this is a map to those molecules associated with a particular pathogen. Using a machine learning algorithm trained on epitopes from known infections, the company generates a report to indicate the similarity with this person's epitope. |