Research Article

Reliability of antibody tests for COVID-19 diagnosis

Volume: 36 Number: 1 January 31, 2023
  • Nilay Coplu *
  • Cetin Kılınc
  • Aysegul Gozalan
  • Busra Calısır
  • Cemile Sonmez
  • Mustafa Muhammet Gul
  • Zeynep Aygun Ahlatcıoglu
EN

Reliability of antibody tests for COVID-19 diagnosis

Abstract

Objective: The reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction test (RT-PCR) is the gold standard for the diagnosis of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), and antibody tests are useful as supplemental tools for diagnosis, for measuring the population’s immunity levels, and for checking infection in asymptomatic contacts. This study aimed to evaluate the reliability of five commercial antibody detection test kits. Materials and Methods: The reliability of the Colloidal Gold COVID-19 IgG/IgM Rapid Test Kit, Antibody Rapid Test Hotgen, Beijing Hotgen Biotech Co., Ltd., China), Abbott Chemiluminescent Microparticle Immunoassay (Illinois, USA), Roche Electrochemiluminescence Immunoassay (Roche Diagnostics, Switzerland), Siemens Chemiluminescence (Munich, Germany), and Euroimmun ELISA (Lübeck, Germany) for COVID-19 diagnosis was studied. The antibody-negative group included 50 sera from 2018, and the antibody-positive group included 98 patients with positive RT-PCR results from whom blood samples had been collected 3–9 weeks after hospital discharge. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS version 23.0 (IBM Corporation, Armonk, NY, USA). The antibody tests’ validity and intra-assay reproducibility were examined, and the Cohen’s kappa coefficients were obtained. The disease prevalence was pegged at 10%. Results: The antibody tests’ sensitivity (69.12–72.46%) and positive predictive values (42.44–100.0%) were low, and their specificity (89.58–100%) and negative predictive values (96.31–97.03%) were high. Their accuracy rates varied from 87.54% to 97.25%, and their intra-assay coefficients of variation varied from 1% to 10%. Conclusion: The agreement between the results of the antibody detection test kits was higher when the kits were classified according to the targeted antigens. The time of blood sample collection, targeted antigens, and antibody types affected the results. Serological tests were found to be useful, and the commercial kits were found to be largely reliable, although, some parameters need to be improved.

Keywords

References

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Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Clinical Sciences

Journal Section

Research Article

Authors

Nilay Coplu * This is me
0000-0003-1956-1417
Türkiye

Cetin Kılınc This is me
0000-0003-4958-2622
Türkiye

Aysegul Gozalan This is me
0000-0003-2203-3156
Türkiye

Busra Calısır This is me
0000-0001-6257-5422
Türkiye

Cemile Sonmez This is me
0000-0002-3725-6451
Türkiye

Mustafa Muhammet Gul This is me
0000-0002-9732-3521
Türkiye

Zeynep Aygun Ahlatcıoglu This is me
0000-0003-0482-0607
Türkiye

Publication Date

January 31, 2023

Submission Date

June 13, 2022

Acceptance Date

October 22, 2022

Published in Issue

Year 2023 Volume: 36 Number: 1

APA
Coplu, N., Kılınc, C., Gozalan, A., Calısır, B., Sonmez, C., Gul, M. M., & Aygun Ahlatcıoglu, Z. (2023). Reliability of antibody tests for COVID-19 diagnosis. Marmara Medical Journal, 36(1), 93-98. https://doi.org/10.5472/marumj.1245068
AMA
1.Coplu N, Kılınc C, Gozalan A, et al. Reliability of antibody tests for COVID-19 diagnosis. Marmara Med J. 2023;36(1):93-98. doi:10.5472/marumj.1245068
Chicago
Coplu, Nilay, Cetin Kılınc, Aysegul Gozalan, et al. 2023. “Reliability of Antibody Tests for COVID-19 Diagnosis”. Marmara Medical Journal 36 (1): 93-98. https://doi.org/10.5472/marumj.1245068.
EndNote
Coplu N, Kılınc C, Gozalan A, Calısır B, Sonmez C, Gul MM, Aygun Ahlatcıoglu Z (January 1, 2023) Reliability of antibody tests for COVID-19 diagnosis. Marmara Medical Journal 36 1 93–98.
IEEE
[1]N. Coplu et al., “Reliability of antibody tests for COVID-19 diagnosis”, Marmara Med J, vol. 36, no. 1, pp. 93–98, Jan. 2023, doi: 10.5472/marumj.1245068.
ISNAD
Coplu, Nilay - Kılınc, Cetin - Gozalan, Aysegul - Calısır, Busra - Sonmez, Cemile - Gul, Mustafa Muhammet - Aygun Ahlatcıoglu, Zeynep. “Reliability of Antibody Tests for COVID-19 Diagnosis”. Marmara Medical Journal 36/1 (January 1, 2023): 93-98. https://doi.org/10.5472/marumj.1245068.
JAMA
1.Coplu N, Kılınc C, Gozalan A, Calısır B, Sonmez C, Gul MM, Aygun Ahlatcıoglu Z. Reliability of antibody tests for COVID-19 diagnosis. Marmara Med J. 2023;36:93–98.
MLA
Coplu, Nilay, et al. “Reliability of Antibody Tests for COVID-19 Diagnosis”. Marmara Medical Journal, vol. 36, no. 1, Jan. 2023, pp. 93-98, doi:10.5472/marumj.1245068.
Vancouver
1.Nilay Coplu, Cetin Kılınc, Aysegul Gozalan, Busra Calısır, Cemile Sonmez, Mustafa Muhammet Gul, Zeynep Aygun Ahlatcıoglu. Reliability of antibody tests for COVID-19 diagnosis. Marmara Med J. 2023 Jan. 1;36(1):93-8. doi:10.5472/marumj.1245068