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Montreal

Rapid test very reliable when used on symptomatic patients, Quebec scientists find

When used on patients with clear COVID-19 symptoms and an elevated viral load, the scientists were able to raise the detection rate from 75 per cent to 98.8 per cent.

Health officials in Quebec City will recommend expanding use of test that provides results in 15 minutes

Scientists say that the ID NOW test, which can process results in 15 minutes, is reliable when used on people with a large viral load. (CBC)

Microbiologists in Quebec City say they have found a way to reliablyuse a COVID-19 testing kit that can deliver accurate results in 15 minutes, but only when used on symptomatic individuals.

The ID NOW test was approved by Health Canada earlier this year, but the agency recommended confirming results with a standard laboratory test because its detection rate was only 75 per cent.

That prompted Quebec to delay usingID NOW kits attesting sites in the province, preferring the more sensitive PCR lab test that can take several days to analyze.

But apilot project run by the CIUSSS de la Capitale-Nationale and CISSS de Chaudire-Appalaches regional health authorities in the Quebec City area has increased the rapid test's reliability by only using it in certain conditions.

When used on patients with clear COVID-19 symptoms and an elevated viral load, the scientists were able to raise the detection rate to 98.8 per cent.

The federal government has provided nearly 70,000 ID NOW test kits to Quebec, but Health Canada currently recommends verifying results with a lab test. (Jeff Chiu/The Associated Press)

According to infectious disease specialist Jean Longtin, what's key is to "ensure to use the right test for the right patient, at the right time." He says effective triage at testing sites would allow the rapid tests to be used reliably.

"The larger the viral load in the patient's respiratory tract, the better the performance of the test," said Longtin, who added those conditions mean it wouldn't be effective for screening travelers at airports.

Rapid tests could speed up contact tracing, experts say

A senior public health official in Quebec City said patients with clear symptoms of COVID-19, and who livewith others, would be eligible for the rapid test.

That represents roughly a third of the 1,000 people who show up dailyat the testing site at the ExpoCit convention centre in Quebec City,said Serge Garneau, assistant director of general health services for the CIUSSS de la Capitale-Nationale.

Garneau saidthepilot project shows that the second validation is no longer necessary. The CIUSSS is planning on recommending that the ID NOW tests be used on their own, under specific circumstances.

The convention centre currently has six rapid testing kits, but is hoping to receive 40 more by the spring.

Millions of rapid tests have already been delivered to provincial health authorities across Canada.In Quebec, they are being usedin Saguenayand at Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital in Montreal.

But in nearly all cases, the tests are verified with a PCRtest due to questions over the reliability of rapid testing.

The biggest advantage of an accurate ID NOWtestis speeding up the contact-tracing process, which is vital to controlling the spread of the disease.

"It will allow us to move faster than the virus and find the person's contacts in an hour or two, instead of waiting 24 hours," Longtin said.

Performing the ID NOW test remains a complicated process, however. Specialized swabs and equipment are needed to use them correctly, and each testing kit can only process four tests per hour, one test at a time.

Ottawa has provided Quebec with two kinds of rapid tests: theID NOW test, as well as one developed by Panbio. Both are made byAbbott Laboratories.

According to documents obtained by Radio-Canada, the Panbio tests present more significant reliability problems than the ID NOW tests, missing 20 to 30 per cent of positive cases.

A similar pilot project is underway to determine if the reliability of the Panbio tests can also be increased.

Based on a report by Radio-Canada's Vronique Prince

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