1. Impact of antigen test target failure and testing strategies on the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 variants.
- Author
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Del Vecchio, Claudia, Cracknell Daniels, Bethan, Brancaccio, Giuseppina, Brazzale, Alessandra Rosalba, Lavezzo, Enrico, Ciavarella, Constanze, Onelia, Francesco, Franchin, Elisa, Manuto, Laura, Bianca, Federico, Cianci, Vito, Cattelan, Anna Maria, Dorigatti, Ilaria, Toppo, Stefano, and Crisanti, Andrea
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ANTIGEN analysis ,SARS-CoV-2 ,DIAGNOSIS methods ,EPIDEMIOLOGICAL models - Abstract
Population testing remains central to COVID-19 control and surveillance, with countries increasingly using antigen tests rather than molecular tests. Here we describe a SARS-CoV-2 variant that escapes N antigen tests due to multiple disruptive amino-acid substitutions in the N protein. By fitting a multistrain compartmental model to genomic and epidemiological data, we show that widespread antigen testing in the Italian region of Veneto favored the undetected spread of the antigen-escape variant compared to the rest of Italy. We highlight novel limitations of widespread antigen testing in the absence of molecular testing for diagnostic or confirmatory purposes. Notably, we find that genomic surveillance systems which rely on antigen population testing to identify samples for sequencing will bias detection of escape antigen test variants. Together, these findings highlight the importance of retaining molecular testing for surveillance purposes, including in contexts where the use of antigen tests is widespread. Increasing reliance on antigen tests for SARS-CoV-2 screening may risk selection for variants not detected by these tests. Here, the authors identify a variant of this type circulating in Italy, estimate the potential impact of failure to detect the variant, and model testing strategies to mitigate the risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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