Clinical and laboratory evaluation of SARS-CoV-2 lateral flow assays for use in a national COVID-19 seroprevalence survey
Author:
Flower BarnabyORCID, Brown Jonathan CORCID, Simmons Bryony, Moshe Maya, Frise Rebecca, Penn Rebecca, Kugathasan Ruthiran, Petersen Claire, Daunt Anna, Ashby Deborah, Riley Steven, Atchison Christina Joanne, Taylor Graham P, Satkunarajah Sutha, Naar Lenny, Klaber Robert, Badhan Anjna, Rosadas Carolina, Khan Maryam, Fernandez Natalia, Sureda-Vives Macià, Cheeseman Hannah M, O'Hara Jessica, Fontana Gianluca, Pallett Scott J CORCID, Rayment Michael, Jones Rachael, Moore Luke S PORCID, McClure Myra O, Cherepanov Peter, Tedder Richard, Ashrafian Hutan, Shattock Robin, Ward Helen, Darzi Ara, Elliot Paul, Barclay Wendy S, Cooke Graham S
Abstract
BackgroundAccurate antibody tests are essential to monitor the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Lateral flow immunoassays (LFIAs) can deliver testing at scale. However, reported performance varies, and sensitivity analyses have generally been conducted on serum from hospitalised patients. For use in community testing, evaluation of finger-prick self-tests, in non-hospitalised individuals, is required.MethodsSensitivity analysis was conducted on 276 non-hospitalised participants. All had tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 by reverse transcription PCR and were ≥21 days from symptom onset. In phase I, we evaluated five LFIAs in clinic (with finger prick) and laboratory (with blood and sera) in comparison to (1) PCR-confirmed infection and (2) presence of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies on two ‘in-house’ ELISAs. Specificity analysis was performed on 500 prepandemic sera. In phase II, six additional LFIAs were assessed with serum.Findings95% (95% CI 92.2% to 97.3%) of the infected cohort had detectable antibodies on at least one ELISA. LFIA sensitivity was variable, but significantly inferior to ELISA in 8 out of 11 assessed. Of LFIAs assessed in both clinic and laboratory, finger-prick self-test sensitivity varied from 21% to 92% versus PCR-confirmed cases and from 22% to 96% versus composite ELISA positives. Concordance between finger-prick and serum testing was at best moderate (kappa 0.56) and, at worst, slight (kappa 0.13). All LFIAs had high specificity (97.2%–99.8%).InterpretationLFIA sensitivity and sample concordance is variable, highlighting the importance of evaluations in setting of intended use. This rigorous approach to LFIA evaluation identified a test with high specificity (98.6% (95%CI 97.1% to 99.4%)), moderate sensitivity (84.4% with finger prick (95% CI 70.5% to 93.5%)) and moderate concordance, suitable for seroprevalence surveys.
Funder
UK Research and Innovation Government of the United Kingdom
Subject
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
Reference25 articles.
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