P-1637. Limitations of Upper Respiratory Tract Testing in Diagnosing COVID-19 Pneumonia: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Ming-Wei Lin, Yun-Ting Chung, Shian-Sen Shie, Po-Yen Huang, Ching-Tai Huang

TL;DR
This study shows that upper respiratory tests can miss up to 22% of COVID-19 pneumonia cases, suggesting lower respiratory testing is needed for accurate diagnosis.
Contribution
The study quantifies the diagnostic limitations of upper respiratory testing and advocates for lower respiratory testing in suspected pneumonia cases.
Findings
Approximately 14–22% of LRT-positive patients had negative URT test results.
Clinical severity was not significantly different between URT(-)/LRT(+) and URT(+)/LRT(+) groups.
LRT testing is recommended to avoid missing cases with negative URT results.
Abstract
Upper respiratory tract (URT) testing including rapid antigen tests and RT-PCR of nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal swabs has been the cornerstone for diagnosing SARS-CoV2 infection. However, emerging evidence suggests that negative URT results may not definitively exclude COVID-19 pneumonia, potentially delaying appropriate treatment. This study aims to evaluate the diagnostic yield of lower respiratory tract (LRT) testing and its implications for clinical severity.Concordance Between URT and LRT SARS-CoV-2 Testing ResultsTables showing the diagnostic concordance between upper respiratory tract (URT) and lower respiratory tract (LRT) SARS-CoV-2 tests in 511 patients. The first table includes all LRT-positive cases; the second applies a stricter LRT positivity definition with CT<30. A notable proportion of LRT-positive patients had negative URT results in both scenarios.Clinical Severity…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSARS-CoV-2 detection and testing · Respiratory viral infections research · COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies
