Journal of Infection and Public Health (Aug 2022)

De-isolation of vaccinated COVID-19 health care workers using rapid antigen detection test

  • Abeer N. Alshukairi,
  • Awad Al-Omari,
  • Mohammad K. Al Hroub,
  • Jaffar A. Al-Tawfiq,
  • Mohammed Qutub,
  • Samaher Shaikh,
  • Khalid Allali,
  • Mohammed F. Saeedi,
  • Roaa S. Alosaimi,
  • Elaf Alamoudi,
  • Lama K. Hefni,
  • Aiman El-Saed,
  • Fatma S. Alhamlan,
  • Ashraf Dada,
  • Ghassan Y. Wali

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 8
pp. 902 – 905

Abstract

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Background: COVID-19 de-isolation guidelines of health care workers (HCW) were formulated based on evidence describing the duration of infectious viral shedding of the wild SARS-CoV-2 virus. During the periods of COVID-19 vaccination and variants, a test-based approach was recommended to end isolation of HCW, based on emerging data describing the viral kinetics of COVID-19 variants. While Rapid antigen detection tests (RADT) are increasingly used in the diagnosis of COVID-19, their use is limited in de-isolation. Methods: We described the use of RADT in the de-isolation of COVID-19 vaccinated HCW with mild infection who were asymptomatic on day 7 post diagnosis in a single center retrospective cohort study during the Omicron surge. Results: Of the 480 HCWs, 173 (36%) had positive RADT. The positivity rate of RADT was not different in HCW who received two doses versus three doses of vaccine (34.4% versus 40.3%, p = 0.239). Conclusions: A symptom based, test-based approach using RADT is a useful tool in the de-isolation of HCW, with mild disease, in the era of Omicron. Further studies are required to evaluate the role of RADT in de-isolation of patients with severe COVID-19 disease.

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