Abstract
Abstract
Objective
To assess the accuracy of the AbC-19 Rapid Test lateral flow
immunoassay for the detection of previous severe acute respiratory
syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection.
Design
Test accuracy study.
Setting
Laboratory based evaluation.
Participants
2847 key workers (healthcare staff, fire and rescue officers, and
police officers) in England in June 2020 (268 with a previous polymerase
chain reaction (PCR) positive result (median 63 days previously), 2579
with unknown previous infection status); and 1995 pre-pandemic blood
donors.
Main outcome measures
AbC-19 sensitivity and specificity, estimated using known negative
(pre-pandemic) and known positive (PCR confirmed) samples as reference
standards and secondly using the Roche Elecsys anti-nucleoprotein assay,
a highly sensitive laboratory immunoassay, as a reference standard in
samples from key workers.
Results
Test result bands were often weak, with positive/negative
discordance by three trained laboratory staff for 3.9% of devices. Using
consensus readings, for known positive and negative samples sensitivity
was 92.5% (95% confidence interval 88.8% to 95.1%) and specificity was
97.9% (97.2% to 98.4%). Using an immunoassay reference standard,
sensitivity was 94.2% (90.7% to 96.5%) among PCR confirmed cases but
84.7% (80.6% to 88.1%) among other people with antibodies. This is
consistent with AbC-19 being more sensitive when antibody concentrations
are higher, as people with PCR confirmation tended to have more severe
disease whereas only 62% (218/354) of seropositive participants had had
symptoms. If 1 million key workers were tested with AbC-19 and 10% had
actually been previously infected, 84 700 true positive and 18 900 false
positive results would be projected. The probability that a positive
result was correct would be 81.7% (76.8% to 85.8%).
Conclusions
AbC-19 sensitivity was lower among unselected populations than among
PCR confirmed cases of SARS-CoV-2, highlighting the scope for
overestimation of assay performance in studies involving only PCR
confirmed cases, owing to “spectrum bias.” Assuming that 10% of the
tested population have had SARS-CoV-2 infection, around one in five key
workers testing positive with AbC-19 would be false positives.
Study registration
ISRCTN 56609224.
Cited by
39 articles.
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