Performance of five FDA-approved rapid antigen tests in the detection of 2009 H1N1 influenza A virus.

Journal: Journal Of Medical Virology
Published:
Abstract

Rapid antigen tests are commonly used by clinicians for rapid, simple, point-of-care testing. Five rapid antigen tests were shown to have low sensitivity (40.3-58.8%) when compared to real-time RT-PCR using nasal wash specimens from patients with influenza-like-illness (N = 167) that were collected previously and confirmed as 2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1)-positive by PCR. Rapid antigen test sensitivity correlated with virus levels in nasal secretions when comparisons were made to cycle threshold (C(T)) values obtained from real-time RT-PCR. When C(T) values are <25 (equating to viral concentrations of >10(4)  TCID(50)/ml) sensitivity for all five rapid antigen kits was high (range: 83-94% positive); however, when C(T) values are >30 (10(2)  TCID(50)/ml), sensitivities of only 16-18% were observed for four of five rapid antigen kits. The Directigen EZ Flu A + B test detected more positive samples (35%) at lower viral concentrations with C(T) values >30 when compared with other commercial kits (P = 0.05). Rapid antigen test results must be interpreted with caution, and negative specimens may need confirmation by sensitive molecular assays.

Authors
Deena Sutter, Sue Worthy, Donna Hensley, Ashley Maranich, Donna Dolan, Gerald Fischer, Luke Daum
Relevant Conditions

H1N1 Influenza, Flu