International Journal of Infectious Diseases (May 2022)

SARS-CoV-2 screening strategies for returning international travellers: Evaluation of a rapid antigen test approach

  • Emily Layer,
  • Sebastian Hoehl,
  • Marek Widera,
  • Denisa Bojkova,
  • Tim Westphal,
  • Rene Gottschalk,
  • Boris Boeddinghaus,
  • Joscha Schork,
  • Sandra Ciesek,
  • Udo Goetsch

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 118
pp. 126 – 131

Abstract

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Background: International travel poses the risk of importing SARS-CoV-2 infections and introducing new viral variants into the country of destination. Established measures include mandatory quarantine with the opportunity to abbreviate it with a negative rapid antigen test (RAT). Methods: A total of 1,488 returnees were tested for SARS-CoV-2 with both PCR and RAT no earlier than 5 days after arrival. We assessed the sensitivity and specificity of the RAT. Positive samples were evaluated for infectivity in vitro in a cell culture outgrowth assay. We tracked if participants who tested negative were reported positive within 2 weeks of the initial test. Results: Potential infectiousness was determined based on symptom onset analysis, resulting in a sensitivity of the antigen test of 89% in terms of infectivity. The specificity was 100%. All positive outgrowth assays were preceded by a positive RAT, indicating that all participants with proven in vitro infectivity were correctly identified. None of the negative participants tested positive during the follow-up. Conclusions: RAT no earlier than the 5th day after arrival was a reliable method for detecting infectious travellers and can be recommended as an appropriate method for managing SARS-CoV-2 travel restrictions. Compliance to the regulations and a high standard of test quality must be ensured.

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