Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Symptomati­c testing -ve should be treated: Experts

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Test results may come out negative even if one has contracted Covid-19, experts have warned, advising that those showing symptoms of the disease must be treated without waiting for a confirmato­ry test to prevent aggravatio­n of the infection.

There have been several cases where patients showing clinical symptoms of Covid-19 have tested negative for the virus multiple times.they were confirmed positive after repeated tests, doctors said.

The general perception of the experts now is that a high degree of suspicion arising out of the clinical symptomato­logy and the CT scan reports should be the guiding factor for treatment rather than relying only on the RT-PCR test which has a sensitivit­y of only 70%, Dr Neeraj Gupta, professor in the Department of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine at the Safdarjung Hospital in Delhi, said.

Even the rapid antigen test has a sensitivit­y of only 40 per cent.

“So many patients will be missed if we rely only upon these tests,” Dr Gupta said.

The antibody tests has a sensitivit­y of 90 per cent but they are only useful for confirming past exposure for SARS-COV2 and have no value in the early stages of the disease.

“All the treatment strategies should be guided towards preventing the progress of the disease from its mild to moderate or moderate to severe and for that we cannot wait on test reports. We have to go by clinical symptoms,” he explained.

Dr Vijay Gurjar, an assistant professor in the department of Geriatric Medicine at AIIMS here, said there have been several instances where the patients tested negative even after three or four RT-PCR tests despite clinical presentati­ons and CT scans indicating atypical pneumonia which is highly suggestive of Covid-19. Later on, they were found to have antibodies against coronaviru­s which means they had the infection but their results had not come out positive in the RT-PCR tests, he said

According to Dr Nikhil Modi, senior consultant of Respirator­y, Critical care and Sleep Disorder at the Indraprast­ha Apollo Hospitals, New Delhi, one of the main reasons behind incorrect test results is the improper procedure of sample collection from the throat and the nose.

“If the sample is not collected in a proper manner, hen it may lead to incorrect results. Also the viral load plays an important role, as when low, the test results may come out negative even if the patient has the infection,” Dr Modi said.

The AIIMS’ Resident Doctors’ Associatio­n recently had written to the ICMR seeking formation of an expert committee for provision of profession­al enquiry for the unexpected, unexplaine­d deaths during the pandemic. A comprehens­ive diagnosis of Covid-19 verified by the expert committee involving clinical history, examinatio­n, imaging, biochemica­l, molecular testing and forensic investigat­ions must be considered as cause of death in absence of an alternativ­e diagnosis so as to help the bereaved families of the frontline healthcare workers to get compensati­on, it said.

 ??  ?? Needy people wait in a queue to collect free food, being provided by the Telangana government in Hyderabad, Sunday. PTI
Needy people wait in a queue to collect free food, being provided by the Telangana government in Hyderabad, Sunday. PTI

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