| Literature DB >> 34066047 |
David T Harris1,2, Michael Badowski1, Brandon Jernigan1, Ryan Sprissler3, Taylor Edwards3, Randall Cohen4, Stephen Paul4, Nirav Merchant5, Craig C Weinkauf6, Christian Bime7, Heidi E Erickson7, Billie Bixby7, Sairam Parthasarathy7, Sachin Chaudhary7, Bhupinder Natt7, Elaine Cristan7, Tammer El Aini7, Franz Rischard7, Janet Campion7, Madhav Chopra7, Michael Insel7, Afshin Sam7, James L Knepler7, Kenneth Knox8, Jarrod Mosier9, Catherine Spier10, Michael D Dake11.
Abstract
SARS-CoV-2, the cause of COVID19, has caused a pandemic that has infected more than 80 M and killed more than 1.6 M persons worldwide. In the US as of December 2020, it has infected more than 32 M people while causing more than 570,000 deaths. As the pandemic persists, there has been a public demand to reopen schools and university campuses. To consider these demands, it is necessary to rapidly identify those individuals infected with the virus and isolate them so that disease transmission can be stopped. In the present study, we examined the sensitivity of the Quidel Rapid Antigen test for use in screening both symptomatic and asymptomatic individuals at the University of Arizona from June to August 2020. A total of 885 symptomatic and 1551 asymptomatic subjects were assessed by antigen testing and real-time PCR testing. The sensitivity of the test for both symptomatic and asymptomatic persons was between 82 and 90%, with some caveats.Entities:
Keywords: PCR; SARS-CoV-2; asymptomatic; diagnostic screening; rapid antigen test
Year: 2021 PMID: 34066047 PMCID: PMC8150898 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines9050539
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Validation of the SARS-CoV-2 rapid antigen test.
| ID# | Type of Sample | Expected Result | Ag Test Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 2 | SPK | NEG | NEG |
| 3 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 4 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 5 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 6 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 7 | SPK | NEG | NEG |
| 8 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 9 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 10 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 11 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 12 | SPK | NEG | NEG |
| 13 | SPK | NEG | NEG |
| 14 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 15 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 16 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 17 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 18 | SPK | NEG | NEG |
| 19 | SPK | POS | POS |
| 20 | SPK | POS | POS |
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| BF00043 | SYMP | POS | POS (ct 23) |
| BF00044 | SYMP | POS | POS (ct 14) |
| BF00081 | SYMP | POS | POS (na) |
| BF00094 | SYMP | POS | POS (na) |
| BF00106 | SYMP | POS | POS (na) |
| BF00112 | SYMP | POS | POS (na) |
| 22 | ASYM | POS | POS (ct 27) |
| 34 | ASYM | POS | POS (ct 22) |
| 113 | ASYM | POS | POS (ct 25) |
| 127 | ASYM | POS | POS (ct 17) |
| 156 | ASYM | POS | POS (ct 22) |
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| 24524 | ASYM | POS | POS (ct 23) |
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A mixed set of possible positive and negative nasal swabs was analyzed as part of the validation of the rapid antigen test. Nasal swabs were collected as per the manufacturer’s instructions from “spiked” samples (SPK), symptomatic critically ill patients hospitalized in an intensive care unit (SYMP), and asymptomatic (ASYM) subjects from the campus community. Additional subjects that tested negative by both Ag and PCR tests during the validation studies are not shown. ct: PCR cycle threshold. POS: positive result/detected. NEG: negative result/not detected. ID#: unique sample identification number. na: ct not available due to HIPAA restrictions. Discordant results are shown in bold type.
Longitudinal study of selected asymptomatic subjects.
| ID# | Ag Test | RT-PCR (Cycle Threshold) |
|---|---|---|
| 22 | POS | POS (ct27) |
| NEG | POS (ct33) | |
| NEG | POS (ct34) | |
| 113 | POS | POS (ct25) |
| NEG | POS (ct35) | |
| 127 | POS | POS (ct17) |
| NEG | POS (ct36) | |
| NEG | POS (ct35) | |
| 112 | NEG | POS (ct36) |
| NEG | POS (ct36) | |
| 139 | NEG | POS (ct31) |
| NEG | POS (ct36) |
During the validation studies, several subjects were tested weekly for the virus over a period of 2–3 consecutive weeks, simultaneously by both antigen and PCR testing, with results shown above (tests conducted 1 week apart). At this time there were also additional samples that tested negative by both antigen and PCR tests that are not shown for the sake of clarity.
Relationship between PCR cycle threshold and rapid antigen test reactivity.
| Symptomatic Subjects | ||
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| PCR RESULTS | ||
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| NEG | |
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Data presented in Table 3 are stratified according to PCR cycle thresholds (ct). Subjects that tested PCR-positive and Ag-negative (in bold) were divided into two groups: <30 ct and >30 ct and mean (X) ct values were calculated.
Figure 1Comparison of PCR cycle thresholds in symptomatic and asymptomatic patients. Subjects were tested simultaneously by Ag and PCR testing for SARS-CoV-2. Patients were broadly grouped into symptomatic patients presenting at campus health and asymptomatic subjects on the university campus. Subgroup results were analyzed based on the combination of results for each test. Violin plots of the data are shown. Each circle represents an independent measurement for a subject.