Spikeopathy is a clinician-popular umbrella term used to describe suspected spike-protein–mediated biological effects contributing to symptoms seen after SARS-CoV-2 infection (and in some contexts, after exposure to spike via other routes). The mainstream clinical umbrella is Post-COVID-19 condition / PASC (Long COVID), defined by the WHO as symptoms occurring usually 3 months from onset, lasting ≥2 months, not explained by an alternative diagnosis. World Health Organization+1
A core problem remains: patients, researchers, and biologics/blood stakeholders still lack widely deployed, DIRECT quantitative measurement tools for spike antigen burden in relevant human samples—especially in a way that can be integrated into research workflows and quality assurance systems.
Ekklesia Research Group’s quantitative spike assay (RUO) was built to address that measurement gap.
Long COVID/PASC is heterogeneous and multifactorial. Many mechanistic pathways are under investigation (immune dysregulation, viral persistence/reservoirs, endothelial injury, microclotting, autoimmunity, dysautonomia, reactivation of latent viruses, etc.). But across these hypotheses, one recurring research question is:
Is viral material (including spike) persisting, and does it correlate with symptoms, recovery trajectories, or product safety/QC outcomes?
Multiple peer-reviewed studies have reported circulating SARS-CoV-2 antigens (including spike) in subsets of participants months and even years after infection, as well as autopsy studies supporting ongoing inquiry into antigen persistence and its clinical relevance.
Bottom line: whether spike antigen persistence is causal, contributory, or simply a biomarker in specific phenotypes, you can’t responsibly answer these questions at scale without measurement.
A major Nature paper mapped SARS-CoV-2 distribution and reported evidence consistent with systemic infection and persistence for months in some cases. Nature+1
Some studies/preprints report spike detection in subsets without evidence of a pathogenic role in post-COVID syndrome, underscoring the need for:
If you want answers that survive scrutiny, you need tools that survive scrutiny.
Long COVID is often diagnosed clinically after exclusion of other causes, and many routine lab panels are not diagnostic. This is widely acknowledged in both clinical and public-health coverage and is a major driver for biomarker research. Axios
Ekklesia’s RUO spike assay is designed for quantitative measurement of spike-related targets in research workflows, enabling teams to:
This assay is labeled For Research Use Only and is not for diagnostic procedures. We do not market it as an IVD or a medical diagnostic test. RUO/IUO labeling and distribution expectations are described by FDA guidance and device labeling policies. U.S. Food and Drug Administration+1
If you’re designing observational studies, biobanking protocols, or mechanistic investigations, measurement allows you to move from “theories” to testable, falsifiable hypotheses.
If you maintain a quality system, you already understand: you can’t manage what you don’t measure. Quantitative assays can support research programs exploring contamination hypotheses, lot characterization, and risk assessment.
For organizations pursuing transparency, donor-lot characterization, or investigational screening programs, RUO testing can be integrated into research protocols where appropriate.
Offer sponsors something rare: a way to incorporate spike antigen measurement into a serious, publishable program.
We co-develop a study plan with your team (IRB pathways, sampling schedule, endpoints, and statistical plan), then operationalize testing. For serious groups: publish methods, reproducibility, and limitations transparently. Integrate our RUO assay into your menu so your sponsors can add it as a module.
Lot characterization and targeted research initiatives to answer specific contamination and safety questions. Establish quality assurance for every step in the production and handling of biologics.
Click the Link below to learn how to become a research partner: