BMC Infectious Diseases (Feb 2022)

RT-PCR negative COVID-19

  • Heta Parmar,
  • Margaret Montovano,
  • Padmapriya Banada,
  • Sri Ram Pentakota,
  • Stephanie Shiau,
  • Zhongjie Ma,
  • Kaheerman Saibire,
  • Abby Chopoorian,
  • Michael O’Shaughnessy,
  • Mitchell Hirsch,
  • Priyanshi Jain,
  • Gaiane Demirdjian,
  • Magali Karagueuzian,
  • Thomas Robin,
  • Michael Salvati,
  • Bhavana Patel,
  • David Alland,
  • Yingda L. Xie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-022-07095-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background COVID-19 is a multi-system infection with emerging evidence-based antiviral and anti-inflammatory therapies to improve disease prognosis. However, a subset of patients with COVID-19 signs and symptoms have repeatedly negative RT-PCR tests, leading to treatment hesitancy. We used comparative serology early in the COVID-19 pandemic when background seroprevalence was low to estimate the likelihood of COVID-19 infection among RT-PCR negative patients with clinical signs and/or symptoms compatible with COVID-19. Methods Between April and October 2020, we conducted serologic testing of patients with (i) signs and symptoms of COVID-19 who were repeatedly negative by RT-PCR (‘Probables’; N = 20), (ii) signs and symptoms of COVID-19 but with a potential alternative diagnosis (‘Suspects’; N = 15), (iii) no signs and symptoms of COVID-19 (‘Non-suspects’; N = 43), (iv) RT-PCR confirmed COVID-19 patients (N = 40), and (v) pre-pandemic samples (N = 55). Results Probables had similar seropositivity and levels of IgG and IgM antibodies as propensity-score matched RT-PCR confirmed COVID-19 patients (60.0% vs 80.0% for IgG, p-value = 0.13; 50.0% vs 72.5% for IgM, p-value = 0.10), but multi-fold higher seropositivity rates than Suspects and matched Non-suspects (60.0% vs 13.3% and 11.6% for IgG; 50.0% vs 0% and 4.7% for IgM respectively; p-values < 0.01). However, Probables were half as likely to receive COVID-19 treatment than the RT-PCR confirmed COVID-19 patients with similar disease severity. Conclusions Findings from this study indicate a high likelihood of acute COVID-19 among RT-PCR negative with typical signs/symptoms, but a common omission of COVID-19 therapies among these patients. Clinically diagnosed COVID-19, independent of RT-PCR positivity, thus has a potential vital role in guiding treatment decisions.

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