Meta-analysis of the clinical performance of commercial SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid, antigen and antibody tests up to 22 August 2020
We reviewed the clinical performance of SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid, viral antigen and antibody tests based on 94739 test results from 157 published studies and 20205 new test results from 12 EU/EEA Member States. Pooling the results and considering only results with 95% confidence interval width ≤5%, we found 4 nucleic acid tests, among which 1 point of care test, and 3 antibody tests with a clinical sensitivity ≤95% for at least one target population (hospitalised, mild or asymptomatic, or unknown). Analogously, 9 nucleic acid tests and 25 antibody tests, among which 12 point of care tests, had a clinical specificity of ≤98%. Three antibody tests achieved both thresholds. Evidence for nucleic acid and antigen point of care tests remains scarce at present, and sensitivity varied substantially. Study heterogeneity was low for 8/14 (57.1%) sensitivity and 68/84 (81.0%) specificity results with confidence interval width ≤5%, and lower for nucleic acid tests than antibody tests. Manufacturer reported clinical performance was significantly higher than independently assessed in 11/32 (34.4%) and 4/34 (11.8%) cases for sensitivity and specificity respectively, indicating a need for improvement in this area. Continuous monitoring of clinical performance within more clearly defined target populations is needed.