Evaluation of Rapid Antigen Tests Using Nasal Samples to Diagnose SARS-CoV-2 in Symptomatic Patients

IntroductionThe best way to mitigate an outbreak besides mass vaccination is via early detection and isolation of infected cases. As such, a rapid, cost-effective test for the early detection of COVID-19 is required.MethodsThe study included 4,183 mildly symptomatic patients. A nasal and nasopharyng...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Manaf Alqahtani (Author), Abdulkarim Abdulrahman (Author), Fathi Mustafa (Author), Abdulla I. Alawadhi (Author), Batool Alalawi (Author), Saad I. Mallah (Author)
Format: Book
Published: Frontiers Media S.A., 2022-01-01T00:00:00Z.
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Summary:IntroductionThe best way to mitigate an outbreak besides mass vaccination is via early detection and isolation of infected cases. As such, a rapid, cost-effective test for the early detection of COVID-19 is required.MethodsThe study included 4,183 mildly symptomatic patients. A nasal and nasopharyngeal sample obtained from each patient was analyzed to determine the diagnostic ability of the rapid antigen detection test (RADT, nasal swab) in comparison with the current gold-standard (RT-PCR, nasopharyngeal swab).ResultsThe calculated sensitivity and specificity of the RADT was 82.1 and 99.1%, respectively. Kappa's coefficient of agreement between the RADT and RT-PCR was 0.859 (p < 0.001). Stratified analysis showed that the sensitivity of the RADT improved significantly when lowering the cut-off RT-PCR Ct value to 24.ConclusionOur study's results support the potential use of nasal swab RADT as a screening tool in mildly symptomatic patients, especially in patients with higher viral loads.
Item Description:2296-2565
10.3389/fpubh.2021.728969