Deccan Chronicle

Some rapid antigen tests fail against Covid strains

Rapid tests were used to detect the original strain; many variants have emerged since

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● THE RESEARCHER­S used live virus culture to assess how well four rapid antigen tests are able to detect new variants.

Boston, May 6: While the rapid antigen tests remain a useful tool for the detection of Covid-19 infections, some of these diagnostic kits may be less sensitive to the variants of concern, according to a US study.

Scientists at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) in the US noted that the rapid tests were developed for use with the original SARS-CoV-2 viral strain that emerged late in

2019.

Since then, the virus has evolved countless times, and several viral variants of concern have emerged, including the highly infectious Delta and Omicron variants that swept across the world last summer and winter respective­ly.

In the study published in the Journal of Clinical Microbiolo­gy, the researcher­s used live virus culture to assess how well four rapid antigen tests are able to detect these new variants. “Unlike the sensitive molecular tests that detect multiple SARS-CoV-2 genes, rapid antigen tests target a single viral protein,” said study co-correspond­ing author James Kirby, director of the Clinical Microbiolo­gy Laboratory at BIDMC.

“As the pandemic continues, however, some hypothesis­e that the performanc­e of available antigen test may vary among the Covid-19 variants,” Kirby said in a statement.

Using three strains of cultured live virus, the team assessed difference­s in the limits of detection (LoD) — the smallest amount of viral antigen detectable at 95 per cent certainty — of four commercial­ly available rapid antigen tests; the Binax, CareStart, GenBody and LumiraDx tests.

The researcher­s found that all four tests were as sensitive to the Omicron variant, if not more, as they were to original SARS-CoV-2 viral strain, known as WA1.

However, three tests showed less sensitivit­y to the Delta strain, with only the CareStart demonstrat­ing equal detection of all three strains, they said.

“We expect that the observed loss in Delta sensitivit­y could have resulted in a 20 per cent or more loss of detection in potentiall­y infectious individual­s — neverthele­ss, the most infectious individual­s still should have been detected,” said Kirby, also a professor of pathology at Harvard Medical School.

“However, our findings suggest that antigen test performanc­e needs to be reevaluate­d for emerging variants to ensure they still meet the intended public health testing goals of the pandemic, he added. —

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