Diagnosis of COVID-19 : considerations, controversies and challenges

Abstract
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) due to a novel virus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), is a global pandemic that has resulted in over 1.5 million confirmed cases and close to 100 000 deaths. In the majority of symptomatic cases, COVID-19 results in a mild disease predominantly characterised by upper respiratory tract symptoms. Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) using a nasopharyngeal sample is the mainstay of diagnosis, but there is an ~30% false negative rate early in the disease and in patients with mild disease, and therefore repeat testing may be required. RT-PCR positivity can persist for several days after resolution of symptoms. IgM and IgG antibody responses become positive several days after the onset of symptoms, and robust antibody responses are detectable in the second week of illness. Antibody-based immunoassays have a limited role in the diagnosis of early symptomatic disease. However, their incremental benefit over RT-PCR in the first 2 weeks of illness is currently being clarified in ongoing studies. Such assays may be useful for surveillance purposes. However, their role in potentially selecting individuals who may benefit from vaccination, or as a biomarker identifying persons who could be redeployed into essential employment roles, is being investigated. Rapid antibody-based immunoassays that detect viral antigen in nasopharyngeal samples are being developed and evaluated.
Description
CITATION: Dheda, K. et al. 2020. Diagnosis of COVID-19 : considerations, controversies and challenges. African Journal of Thoracic and Critical Care Medicine 2020;26(2), doi:10.7196/AJTCCM.2020.v26i2.0XX.
The original publication is available at http://www.ajtccm.org.za
Keywords
COVID-19 (Disease) -- Diagnosis, COVID-19 (Disease) -- Testing -- Effectiveness
Citation
Dheda, K. et al. 2020. Diagnosis of COVID-19 : considerations, controversies and challenges. African Journal of Thoracic and Critical Care Medicine 2020;26(2), doi:10.7196/AJTCCM.2020.v26i2.0XX.