Rapid antigen tests may be used to 'rule-in' COVID patients within first 5 days of illness: ICMR Study

new delhi: Rapid antigen tests may be used to detect COVID-19 patients within the first five days of the illness, leading to quick identification, isolation and treatment, stated a study published in ICMR's Indian Journal of Medical Research (IJMR).
The study conducted at the COVID-19 screening and testing outpatient department at the AIIMS in New Delhi between May 31 and July 24 covering 330 people, stated that patients showing positive results in rapid antigen test need to be immediately triaged and those with negative tests should be reconfirmed by a real-time PCR test
(RT-PCR).
The most commonly presented symptoms among the screened participants were fever (31.5 per cent) followed by cough (25.4 per cent), fatigue and malaise (11.8 per cent), headache (3.3 per cent) and runny nose (3.3 per cent).
57 participants presented with the complaint of a sore throat but only two of them (3.5 per cent) had COVID-19. Overall, among the positive test results, rapid antigen tests detected 63 true positives (19.0 per cent) and gave one false-positive result with respect to the reference standard. Among negative test results, 252 (76.3 per cent) were true negatives and 14 (4.2 per cent) were false negatives.
"In conclusion, the rapid antigen test showed an excellent specificity to 'rule-in' COVID-19 patients within the first five days of the illness and had a moderate sensitivity. Therefore, patients showing positive results need to be immediately triaged and those with negative tests should be reconfirmed by an rRT-PCR," the study
stated.
Real-time RT-PCR is the gold standard test for diagnosing COVID-19. The test requires a specialised laboratory setup with specific biosafety and biosecurity precautions to be
followed.
The need of the hour is to rapidly detect and isolate positive cases to contain the disease spread, to quickly triage patients with severe acute respiratory illness in emergency departments and to ramp up testing facilities, the study said.
About rapid-antigen testing, it said these diagnostic kits and devices facilitate point-of-care testing. These sample kits are based on either antibody detection from blood, plasma or serum or the detection of SARS-CoV-2 antigens from respiratory
samples.
Asserting that the test is a promising tool for quick diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2 in field settings, the study mentioned, "There is very limited data on the performance and potential diagnostic utility of a rapid chromatographic immunoassay-based test for SARS-CoV-2 in suspected
patients."