Point-of-care Serological Assays for Delayed SARS-CoV-2 Case Identification Among Health-care Workers in the UK: a Prospective Multicentre Cohort Study
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Background: Health-care workers constitute a high-risk population for acquisition of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection. Capacity for acute diagnosis via PCR testing was limited for individuals with mild to moderate SARS-CoV-2 infection in the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic and a substantial proportion of health-care workers with suspected infection were not tested. We aimed to investigate the performance of point-of-care and laboratory serology assays and their utility in late case identification, and to estimate SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence.
Methods: We did a prospective multicentre cohort study between April 8 and June 12, 2020, in two phases. Symptomatic health-care workers with mild to moderate symptoms were eligible to participate 14 days after onset of COVID-19 symptoms, as per the Public Health England (PHE) case definition. Health-care workers were recruited to the asymptomatic cohort if they had not developed PHE-defined COVID-19 symptoms since Dec 1, 2019. In phase 1, two point-of-care lateral flow serological assays, the Onsite CTK Biotech COVID-19 split IgG/IgM Rapid Test (CTK Bitotech, Poway, CA, USA) and the Encode SARS-CoV-2 split IgM/IgG One Step Rapid Test Device (Zhuhai Encode Medical Engineering, Zhuhai, China), were evaluated for performance against a laboratory immunoassay (EDI Novel Coronavirus COVID-19 IgG ELISA kit [Epitope Diagnostics, San Diego, CA, USA]) in 300 samples from health-care workers and 100 pre-COVID-19 negative control samples. In phase 2 (n=6440), serosurveillance was done among 1299 (93·4%) of 1391 health-care workers reporting symptoms, and in a subset of asymptomatic health-care workers (405 [8·0%] of 5049).
Findings: There was variation in test performance between the lateral flow serological assays; however, the Encode assay displayed reasonable IgG sensitivity (127 of 136; 93·4% [95% CI 87·8-96·9]) and specificity (99 of 100; 99·0% [94·6-100·0]) among PCR-proven cases and good agreement (282 of 300; 94·0% [91·3-96·7]) with the laboratory immunoassay. By contrast, the Onsite assay had reduced sensitivity (120 of 136; 88·2% [95% CI 81·6-93·1]) and specificity (94 of 100; 94·0% [87·4-97·8]) and agreement (254 of 300; 84·7% [80·6-88·7]). Five (7%) of 70 PCR-positive cases were negative across all assays. Late changes in lateral flow serological assay bands were recorded in 74 (9·3%) of 800 cassettes (35 [8·8%] of 400 Encode assays; 39 [9·8%] of 400 Onsite assays), but only seven (all Onsite assays) of these changes were concordant with the laboratory immunoassay. In phase 2, seroprevalence among the workforce was estimated to be 10·6% (95% CI 7·6-13·6) in asymptomatic health-care workers and 44·7% (42·0-47·4) in symptomatic health-care workers. Seroprevalence across the entire workforce was estimated at 18·0% (95% CI 17·0-18·9).
Interpretation: Although a good positive predictive value was observed with both lateral flow serological assays and ELISA, this agreement only occurred if the pre-test probability was modified by a strict clinical case definition. Late development of lateral flow serological assay bands would preclude postal strategies and potentially home testing. Identification of false-negative results among health-care workers across all assays suggest caution in interpretation of IgG results at this stage; for now, testing is perhaps best delivered in a clinical setting, supported by government advice about physical distancing.
Funding: None.
Mapping the viral battlefield: SARS-CoV-2 infection dynamics among healthcare workers in Brazil.
Gasparoto A, Graeff S, de Souza Santiago W, da Silva D, Dos Santos T, Paulino L Hum Resour Health. 2025; 23(1):8.
PMID: 39934893 PMC: 11817727. DOI: 10.1186/s12960-024-00968-z.
Kamaludeen M, Ranganadin P, Pillai A, Sugumaran A J Family Med Prim Care. 2024; 13(5):1917-1921.
PMID: 38948592 PMC: 11213439. DOI: 10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_1488_23.
Helou M, Zoghbi S, El Osta N, Mina J, Mokhbat J, Husni R Medicine (Baltimore). 2023; 102(17):e32992.
PMID: 37115042 PMC: 10143398. DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000032992.
Wagbo Temessadouno F, Ndong J, Gignoux E, Coppieters Y, Ba A, Sidibe Y PLOS Glob Public Health. 2023; 3(1):e0001316.
PMID: 36962828 PMC: 10022217. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0001316.
Malaeb R, Yousef N, Al-Nagdah O, Ali Q, Saeed M, Haider A PLOS Glob Public Health. 2023; 2(11):e0000767.
PMID: 36962647 PMC: 10022234. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0000767.