"The approach is clever and a technological tour de force," said Ian Lipkin, a professor of epidemiology and director of the Centre for Infection and Immunity at Columbia University, who was not involved in the creation of VirScan.
It has the potential to reveal viruses people have encountered recently or many years earlier ... Thus, this is a powerful new research tool.
Scientists yesterday reported intriguing findings from their initial tests of 569 people they screened using VirScan in the United States, South Africa, Thailand and Peru.
They found the average person has been exposed to 10 of the 206 different species of known viruses - though some people showed exposure to more than double that number.
"Many of those [people] have probably been infected with many different strains of the same virus," said Stephen Elledge, a professor of genetics and medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, who led the development of VirScan.
"You could be infected with many strains of rhinovirus over the course of your life, for instance, and it would show up as one hit."
In addition, he said, certain viruses were far more common in adults than in children, who presumably have yet to encounter much of the world's viral landscape.
People infected with HIV tended to have antibodies against many more viruses than people without the disease.
Researchers also saw striking geographic differences in the way viruses affected different populations.
People in South Africa, Thailand and Peru generally displayed antibodies against many more viruses than people living in the United States.
"We don't know if this has to do with the genetics of the people or the strains of the viruses that are out there," Elledge said of the differences by country. "Or if it has something to do with cultural habits or sanitation."
Elledge said the VirScan analysis currently can be performed for about US$25 ($35) a blood sample, though labs could charge much more than that if the test becomes commercially available. He also said it currently takes two or three days to process and sequence about 100 samples.