Dr Michael Mina MD, PhD is interviewed about Rapid Testing. We discuss the difference between PCR and rapid antigen testing with regards to detection of SARS-CoV-2; the sensitivity of rapid antigen tests and their ability to detect contagious people early and the use of CT values. We also explore how the Omicron variant affects our immune system, the incubation period of this variant and how the rapid antigen tests work in this scenario.
Watch the full interview here: https://youtu.be/qg941B4snZU
Learn more at: https://kojalamedical.com/covid19theanswers/
“TWiV 640: Test often, fast turnaround, with Michael Mina” - https://www.microbe.tv/twiv/twiv-640/
“Test sensitivity is secondary to frequency and turnaround time for COVID-19 screening” - https://www.science.org/doi/full/10.1126/sciadv.abd5393
“COVID-19 testing: One size does not fit all” - https://www.science.org/doi/full/10.1126/science.abe9187
“Active epidemiological investigation on SARS-CoV-2 infection caused by Omicron variant (Pango lineage B.1.1.529) in Japan: preliminary report on infectious period” - https://www.niid.go.jp/niid/en/2019-ncov-e/10884-covid19-66-en.html
“To Interpret the SARS-CoV-2 Test, Consider the Cycle Threshold Value” - https://europepmc.org/article/pmc/pmc7314112
Twitter Feed for Dr Michael Mina - @michaelmina_lab
"COVID-19 Incidence and Death Rates Among Unvaccinated and Fully Vaccinated Adults with and Without Booster Doses During Periods of Delta and Omicron Variant Emergence — 25 U.S. Jurisdictions, April 4–December 25, 2021" -
https://www.cdc.go/mmwr/volumes/71/wr/mm7104e2.htm
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Kojala Medical presents Covid-19 The Answers. The show that delivers the scientific
Speaker:evidence-based knowledge that can safely return us all to our pre-Covid lives.
Speaker:My name is Dr. Funmi Okunola and I'll be hosting the show.
Speaker:Every week you can listen to me interview a highly respected professional
Speaker:about the science that can reduce your risk of becoming infected with this coronavirus.
Speaker:Welcome to COVID-19 the Answers Episode 8 Part 1 – Rapid Testing. Today I’d like to
Speaker:introduce you all to Dr Michael Mina MD, PhD, Chief Science Officer of
Speaker:eMED a biotechnology software company providing virtual authentications of at-home tests.
Speaker:Dr Mina joined eMed in 2022 from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in the USA
Speaker:where he was Associate Professor of Epidemiology,
Speaker:Immunology and Infectious diseases, as well as a core faculty member of the Center for
Speaker:Communicable Disease Dynamics (CDCC). Dr. Mina earned his Ph.D. and M.D. from Emory University
Speaker:and performed postdoctoral research at Princeton University and Harvard Medical School.
Speaker:Dr Mina’s research involved the development of new technologies using mathematical and
Speaker:epidemiological models to understand the pathogenesis of vaccine preventable diseases,
Speaker:with a specific focus on measles infections and vaccines.
Speaker:His research also explored more fundamental questions of immunity.
Speaker:During the COVID-19 pandemic, Dr Mina has been a leading voice and proponent of rapid testing
Speaker:as a major public health screening tool for detecting contagious people early and quickly.
Speaker:Welcome! Well thank you so much! Really happy to be here Michael how did you get into rapid testing
Speaker:Well it's a great question so I'm I am an epidemiologist and an immunologist first and
Speaker:foremost I'm also a physician where I, where prior to the pandemic and during the pandemic
Speaker:I was the associate Medical Director of Molecular Virology Diagnostics at
Speaker:one of Harvard's main teaching hospitals called Brigham and Women's Hospital and at the
Speaker:beginning when Covid-19 started to circulate and SARS-CoV-2 virus started to circulate in China.
Speaker:My team at the Harvard School of Public Health, a group of Epidemiologists, we were working
Speaker:on monitoring and really trying to evaluate was this virus going to become a pandemic was how
Speaker:quickly was it spreading, where was it going and so we started researching the virus very early in
Speaker:January of 2020 and wearing that epidemiology hat. I realized very early on that we were going to
Speaker:I mean it was very essentially incontrovertible that we were going to have a pandemic and
Speaker:the virus is going to spread in the united states so then I went back to the hospital
Speaker:where I had my secondary appointment at Harvard and said and pleaded really with the hospital
Speaker:administration to give me the resources to build COVID PCR testing capacity for our patients I had
Speaker:a lot of resistance early on a lot of comments like oh why would we need a Covid test? This is
Speaker:a virus that's in China and you know it's not in the United States. What are you talking about?
Speaker:And ultimately I succeeded in securing resources, but it took about a month of really arguing with
Speaker:the hospital administration and through that experience I realized pretty quickly that we were
Speaker:not going to have enough capacity for what we really needed, so I went to the broad institute
Speaker:which is a major biotech engineering institute, that is a combination between Harvard and MIT
Speaker:and they've run a lot of the big sequencing programs since the early 2000s for
Speaker:for sequencing the human genome and they have a massively sort of efficient
Speaker:biological core for sequencing so I approached them and I'm also an adjunct faculty at The Broad.
Speaker:So I said 'hey, we're going to need more COVID testing can we use your sequencing facility
Speaker:to start doing PCR testing?' And myself and another physician tried to set that up early
Speaker:and actually that was very successful, but even that and we've run you know on any given day the
Speaker:broad now runs 150,000 or 200,000 PCR tests a day at their lab. So it's massively efficient,
Speaker:but even working with one of the most efficient laboratory engineering groups in the world
Speaker:it became very apparent, very quickly to me that even that wasn't going to be enough testing. That
Speaker:the demand was going to so overwhelm the supply. That the speed required for testing for the
Speaker:purposes of identifying people quickly enough, so they don't go and spread was going to demand
Speaker:a very fast test, so I started looking at rapid tests and different antigen lateral flow antigen
Speaker:test companies that were that were developing these tests and all of them came back and said
Speaker:'you know, this is great idea but we're not going to get the sensitivity we need to match
Speaker:molecular testing' so how so you know this just isn't going to really work out
Speaker:and that really set me off on this path of exploring the question do we really need the type
Speaker:of high, high sensitivity testing that molecular diagnostics PCR provides. If we could have very
Speaker:fast and massively accessible tests that maybe lack a little bit of sensitivity but are much
Speaker:quicker turnaround times and that set off this whole cascade of research in my laboratory with a
Speaker:number of my PhD students and postdocs ultimately to develop some of the core theory underlying why
Speaker:a rapid antigen test is actually not just sufficient, but a better test for pandemic
Speaker:response than laboratory-based PCR diagnostics so that's kind of the sequence of how I got into this
Speaker:territory. Thank god we've got wonderful minds like you on the planet! Is all I can say. So, I first came
Speaker:to hear about managing the COVID pandemic with rapid testing through an interview that Dr Michael
Speaker:Mina did for this week in virology or TWiV back in July 2020. Michael brought a completely different
Speaker:perspective to pandemic management through testing that made so much sense to me and others.
Speaker:For the first time there appeared to be a breakthrough path forward to pandemic management
Speaker:with the implementation of low-cost rapid antigen testing as a screening tool even before the onset
Speaker:of vaccines and on a personal note, I would say your interview was one of the most influential
Speaker:presentations of my medical career. This led on to me influencing as many people as I could about the
Speaker:benefits of rapid testing and joining a widespread campaign to get rapid testing authorized in Canada.
Speaker:So let's get started on the questions. Broadly speaking there are
Speaker:two types of Covid tests those that measure a new or acute infection such as the laboratory PCR or
Speaker:rapid antigen tests and those that measure a previous infection likely some time ago
Speaker:by looking at your antibodies or T cells some you get a fairly immediate result with others it takes
Speaker:hours or in some cases days in this interview we are going to focus on rapid testing of a new
Speaker:or acute SARS-CoV-2 infection so present there are two types of tests available that detect a new or
Speaker:acute SARS-CoV-2 infection a molecular test or an antigen test. Michael, can you please explain the
Speaker:difference between the two and why the distinction is important? Absolutely, so a rapid antigen test
Speaker:and a PCR test are both looking for the virus, but do so in different ways a PCR test
Speaker:is using a technology that looks for the genetic code of the virus the RNA that makes the blueprint
Speaker:for the virus and every virus has RNA inside of it so it makes sense to use that as something we
Speaker:go and look for and the nice thing about that is when you're looking for the genetic code the RNA
Speaker:or in humans it would be the DNA usually we can use PCR and the reason PCR is so critical and
Speaker:so useful is that even if you only have a single molecule. PCR has a what we call an amplification
Speaker:step and it literally like zooms in or amplifies the signal so if there's just one molecule
Speaker:the machine can't see one molecule right off the bat but it goes through what we call cycles of
Speaker:replication or amplification so it takes that one molecule and if it finds it it has a little probe
Speaker:that goes and seeks out the exact part of the RNA that it that we kind of program it to seek out
Speaker:and that would be a part of the of the viruses RNA that's very specific to that virus so you
Speaker:get very few false positives and if there's even just a single molecule it will amplify that one
Speaker:into two molecules and then four molecules and then eight molecules in each cycle it doubles
Speaker:and what that does is eventually you'll have enough molecules through that doubling process
Speaker:that the machine can actually say aha there is a signal here yes there was some starting material
Speaker:from the Covid RNA SARS-CoV-2 RNA so that's a really powerful tool when you're asking the
question:Is my patient infected with this virus, or have they had an infection in the recent weeks
question:because the RNA lasts so even the smallest amount that's of remnant RNA will still be there, which
question:could help a physician discern was my patient's symptoms last week were those due to Covid. Now
question:On the other hand, we have antigen tests, or rapid antigen tests and these very
question:powerful tools because of the speed. Now where they differ is, there's no amplification step.
question:You don't find a protein and multiply it into two and four. It's what you see,
question:will only be enough, there will only be enough that the virus will only turn that test positive.
question:If there's enough virus there to actually, for the person to see with the with sort of the reagents
question:that are on that test and why that's important is that these tests are looking for the actual
question:protein of the virus not the genetic code so if the protein is there and it's in its configured
question:states that the test can actually detect it it means that you have live replicating virus
question:you're currently infectious you're you have actual replicating virus that could potentially infect
question:somebody else so it's an active infection that it's generally finding whereas PCR you don't know
question:if it's necessarily active or if it's two weeks old eventually your body clears all of that RNA
question:but not immediately and so these rapid antigen tests they're fast which makes them exceedingly
question:important and useful for pandemic response they're accessible you can have them in your cupboard at
question:your home and they are specific to the question most of us want to ask which is am I infectious
question:now do I need to isolate? Am I a risk to other people around me and that's why most of us test
question:and that's really what these rapid antigen tests are looking for. Excellent answer, thank you.
question:Rapid tests can be molecular or antigen tests.
question:The molecular tests tend to be an expensive lab in a box type test with cartridges
question:the rapid antigen test can be the lab in the box handheld devices or paper-based tests
question:in this interview we're going to focus in on the use of rapid antigen tests to detect Covid-19.
question:Laboratory-based PCR tests are often called the gold standard tests rapid antigen tests often
question:get a bad press and are labeled less accurate it appears to me that different types of tests
question:play different roles at potentially different times in the virus cycle michael can you please
question:explain the roles that PCR and antigen test play in the detection of SARS-CoV-2?
question:Absolutely, well that might help if I pull up my screen here.
question:All right. Brilliant. So you can see this? Yes. Okay, so PCR and antigen tests can find
question:the virus at different amounts of virus and for different durations of time a PCR test so for when
question:whenever anyone gets exposed to the virus no test will be positive right away and this is a period
question:of time that we call the incubation period when the virus is literally incubating inside of people
question:it's just kind of situating itself in the cells and it's figuring out is this going to be a host
question:that kind of kills me off before I even have a chance to grow or is this going to be a host that
question:I can actually grow in and start replicating and if it starts replicating and it really takes off
question:eventually it will pass what we call the threshold of detection or the lower limit of detection for
question:PCR and this in this particular graph that I've this is kind of a depiction it's not
question:for every individual might be a little bit different but the limit of detection
question:for PCR might be around a thousand viral copies and that's what I'm really showing
question:right here at day zero that might be the first day that somebody is detectable
question:by PCR and then the antigen test might not catch somebody until the virus grows to a hundred
question:thousand copies or maybe even a million copies so that sounds like a big difference a thousand
question:versus a million but what's really important and what is often lost when we think about
question:limits of detection and sensitivity of a test is what does it really mean not from a molecular
question:number but from a time perspective and this is really important in pandemic responses
question:time and it's almost never considered when we think about the metrics of the test and the reason
question:is if you look here at this graph people will go from the limit of detection of a PCR test to
question:hitting the limit of detection of a rapid antigen test that might be a hundred or a thousand times
question:require 100 or a thousand times more virus but that they might pass that threshold within just
question:a day or hours from passing the limit of detection of the PCR and that's because the virus at this
question:point is growing so fast it's exponentially replicating it's doubling and so it doesn't
question:take long for it for with exponential replication for something to go from a thousand to a hundred
question:thousand or a million so within a day or or so you end up passing both thresholds so you you may
question:worry if you're using a rapid antigen test that you're not getting high enough sensitivity but
question:the chances of even sticking the swab in your nose in between those two limits of detection
question:is a very short window of time let's say 15 hours or 24 hours and then you're up here and both tests
question:will be positive at that point both tests will be positive and 99 of all the virus somebody has
question:in their whole infection is going to be is going to exist in just a two to four day period of time
question:and that's when the virus is at its peak that's when you're most infectious
question:an antigen test and a PCR test will both detect you at that period of time a difference being a
question:PCR test if it has to go out to a lab you won't get the result back for a day or two or five
question:depending on what lab you're using so if you're if you have to wait three days to get the result back
question:then by the time you get the result you're already past your peak infectivity and so an antigen
question:test it will turn positive during this period time but give you a result back in 10 minutes
question:so it's extremely important that if you're trying to find the most infectious people
question:and stop them from spreading that results are given back quickly and both of them will do that
question:at that point once you hit peak infectivity or peak viral load your body necessarily has to start
question:clearing the virus the human body can't sustain a billion or a trillion viral particles per mil
question:for more than you know a single replication cycle before your immune system has to really
question:start battling it back down or you end up in the hospital
question:and so our immune systems generally battle it back down and at that point once our immune system
question:falls it battles the virus back down enough we go below the limit of detection again for the
question:rapid antigen test and at that point you're no longer infectious your immune system has cleared
question:99.9 of all the virus that was in your body at peak transmissibility but your PCR test is still
question:positive because even if you only have a thousand or ten thousand viral particles your antigen test
question:might not be able to detect it but the PCR test surely will and it takes a long time for the PCR
question:then to completely go negative because you just had this massive battle take place in your in your
question:nose and in your throat where you had literally trillions of viral particles get beat down by your
question:immune system and then you're using a technology that can detect as little as one viral particle or
question:one piece of RNA so for to get your body to clear from a trillion to zero takes a really long time
question:for some people it takes weeks or even months so the PCR will stay positive from day 10 in
question:this picture all the way to day 25 or 35 and some people even until day 80 the PCR will keep being
question:positive so it's a really good test if you're a forensics detective or a physician who's trying
question:to go back in after the crime has been committed to say what caused these symptoms what was the
question:crime that was committed here oh there was a COVID infection doctors might want that to know what
question:caused my patients symptoms two weeks ago but if you're actively trying to stop spread you really
question:want to focus in on the peak viral transmissible time and PCR is just a little bit too sensitive
question:to really be specific for that question because it stays positive for so long so each of these
question:tests have their merits but one of them is better than the other for detecting currently
question:infectious people in a time frame that's actually useful for stopping them from spreading to others
question:thank you yeah my record for hearing positive PCR detection was an athlete who who tested
question:positive for six months it it absolutely happens and it was one of I remember in february of
question:2020 maybe it was early March I was asked to be the peer reviewer on a research paper from China
question:that was showing people staying positive on PCR for 80 days and that's actually what led the cdc
question:originally to say look if you're positive on a on with Covid don't use a PCR test again for
question:three months because you might keep being positive from the same old infection even though you're no
question:longer infectious so there has for the entire duration of this pandemic this has been known
question:it unfortunately we've had a miscommunication between what we knew and the CDC was saying
question:don't use a PCR test they're not specific to the infectious period but then unfortunately there was
question:a lot of misinformation and miscommunication and misunderstanding about when we use a PCR
question:test as the gold standard for a test meant to detect the transmissible window. A lot of people
question:say 'oh these tests for the transmissible window are not sensitive enough,' but it's not that they
question:weren't sensitive enough to detect that, it was that the PCR was not specific enough to only be
question:positive in that period of time we care about and it has led to massive confusion on a global level
question:literally across the globe about, well. Are antigen tests good enough for what we need them for? And I
question:would argue. Absolutely. They certainly are. Yeah, and we're going to explore that.
question:So with regards to assessing the accuracy of any test in this case a test for Covid the scientific terms
question:sensitivity and specificity are often quoted. Could you please explain what these terms mean
question:for our non-scientific audience and why are they relevant? Absolutely, so the specificity is
question:asking essentially how likely if I'm not infected am I how how many times do I have to test myself
question:with the test before I get a false positive so if you have a very specific test that means
question:you'll only be positive your test will only read positive when you're actually positive if you
question:have a low specificity test then let's say you have a test that's only 90 specific that would
question:be very poor that would mean that if you were to test yourself 100 times and you're not infected
question:that 10 of those tests would actually falsely turn positive so specificity is something very
question:important to keep very, very high like 99.5%, 99.9% specific you don't really want a test
question:that's going to be falsely positive more than say one in a thousand or one in a few thousand tests
question:sensitivity is if I'm infected how likely is it that this test will actually detect that I
question:am in fact infected and the question there is we have to be asking well sensitivity for what
question:is it sensitivity for having any viral RNA in your body or is it sensitivity for being infectious
question:these are different states so we always have to define what is my test sensitive to detect is
question:it any RNA do I have any remnants at all or is it sensitivity to detect an ongoing active infection
question:I like to think about sensitivity in this regard when I put it in an analogy of
question:detectives and security guards at the scene of a crime
question:a test that we need in a pandemic for example for a sensitive test is one that you could liken it to
question:a security camera, or a security guard and you ask the question if there's a crime
question:going on over here. How likely is it that my security camera is going to you know turn
question:on bright red flashing lights and say crime, crime, crime, you know and you want that to be
question:you want it to go on when the crime is actually happening and you want it to go on as much as
question:possible when the crime's happening, so if you have 100 crimes you ideally want it to go on 100 times
question:that there's somebody breaks in. But what you don't want is you don't want it to start flashing red
question:two weeks after that crime took place you know we would think that that was a glitch in the system
question:and that's kind of like what PCR does. It stays it keeps turning on so it's very very sensitive
question:to detect a crime whether it was happening now or two weeks ago so that can be good for some
question:uses like a forensics detective going in and having a very sensitive test to say to pick up
question:even just a hair from the crime scene and say aha yes there was a crime that occurred here
question:and so sensitivity is how likely are you to detect the thing that you're looking for what I think has
question:been totally lacking in this pandemic is a proper definition from physicians and public health
question:officials and the FDA and others to describe what it is that we are trying to be sensitive to detect
question:and it and there's not a one-size-fits-all issue we actually published a paper in science saying
question:for Covid-19 testing. One size does not fit all because what you're looking for,
question:what you want to be sensitive for changes depending on what your goals of testing
question:actually are yeah, no I read that paper and I'll share it in the case notes a link to it
question:so when reading studies that try to assess the validity of rapid antigen tests there
question:seems to be a range of sensitivities quoted in different studies often for the same tests
question:and different scenarios the antigen tests are often compared to PCR tests and found to be not
question:as sensitive can you please explain why this is happening absolutely so I will share another slide
question:so why does this happen if you have an antigen test or PCR test an antigen test. I have on this
question:slide. I'm showing a picture of somebody going through the whole course of infection from getting
question:exposed to the virus replicating to very high numbers to the immune system causing that viral
question:application to diminish and then to essentially being cleared, but somebody's saying PCR positive.
question:Now if you are comparing an antigen test to to PCR and you don't know where the person is in their
question:course of infection then you're actually more likely to be positive on PCR after you've been
question:infectious so you actually spend more time being PCR positive when you're no longer infectious
question:and you spend a fraction of your time being PCR positive actually spreading to other people now
question:an antigen test is very specific for the period of time when you're spreading to other people
question:so I'm showing when people are positive down here on antigen tests it's maybe for about five days
question:but when somebody's positive on PCR it's maybe for about 20 days or more and so the problem is you're
question:you're only infectious for about five days and during those five days you're actually antigen
question:test positive, but if you don't have symptoms for example let's say you have no symptoms you
question:don't know where somebody is in this whole timeline when you take that swab from them
question:so it's actually just very very likely that you're going to collect a sample from somebody who's PCR
question:positive but not infectious and then if you go and collect an antigen test from that same person
question:you're going to get a discordant result it's going to say antigen test negative
question:PCR test positive and you're going and so the way that researchers often look at this unfortunately
question:are physicians have been saying well that's that means that the antigen test is failing because the
question:PCR is positive and the antigen test is negative but this is a big problem with not defining what
question:it is is our target for detection because just based on this graph alone I think you can see that
question:you actually don't want to have somebody start isolating at day 16 into their infection just
question:because they're PCR-positive they have already completely cleared their virus from their body
question:in terms of infectious levels of virus you don't need to isolate anymore if you've just happened to
question:stick the swab in your nose at day 16 to me that would actually be a failure of the testing program
question:if it told you you're positive and you had to go and isolate because of that
question:and so the real issue with what we've seen in so many scientific publications and the way that
question:regulatory agencies across the world value these tests especially in america but also in canada and
question:many other countries is that they keep insisting that an antigen test for one thing gets compared
question:to a PCR for another thing I liken it to the same reason we don't ever compare an x-ray to an MRI. An
question:MRI is expensive it takes a lot of time to perform, you have to schedule it you're not generally going
question:to use it in the emergency room but it's going to find even the smallest little stress fracture
question:but if you're looking for somebody who has a completely broken femur you just need an x-ray,
question:you don't need the power of an MRI and so we don't compare x-rays to MRIs and say that they
question:have to live up to the sensitivity of an MRI because we understand they have different uses
question:and unfortunately in this pandemic we have yet to fully recognize that the two tests have very
question:different uses and very different qualities and we should not be comparing an antigen test to a PCR
question:because they're literally looking for different molecules that have very different half-lives
question:in the body an antigen test is looking for molecules that disappear after five days
question:A PCR test is looking for molecules that disappear after 25 days. Very different uses
question:Thank you. So what are the most important characteristics required for a test,
question:in order to stop the spread of infection during a pandemic i.e to manage transmission of infection?
question:Well that's a great question. So normally in medicine, the characteristics of a test we usually
question:care about are sensitivity and specificity. The characteristics that are generally
question:not even considered, especially at sort of a medical regulatory evaluation are speed and access
question:and what we've shown is actually when your goal is to limit spread access becomes absolutely
question:essential. In fact, speed and access to the test are much, much more important than the
question:molecular sensitivity for all the reasons we just discussed, where you don't need all of the amazing
question:sensitivity of PCR. You just need to test that will detect a million viral particles, or more.
question:For detecting somebody's infectious, so the issue is that if you had a very fast
question:very accessible PCR test, then great you know use it if you want to use it you can be aware
question:of you know you'd have to be aware that you might stay positive for a very long time
question:but the fact of the matter is that PCR is not generally fast and not generally accessible.
question:We want a test that can live in people's homes. At the moment you think maybe I was exposed, maybe I
question:have symptoms that might be COVID. You can pull out the test without having a big barrier to
question:entry and you can get an immediate result and immediacy is just so critical if your test takes
question:two days to return, then it's not going to be good enough to stop spread and I have a slide here that I'll show you.
question:So, I have a slide here that's very relevant to this question.
question:If you are charged with limiting spread in a business, you can choose a
question:test that's a hundred percent sensitive, massively sensitive.It's going to catch every
question:single person that's ever been infected but it takes two days to get a result
question:or you can choose an 80 sensitive rapid test which would be a very poor performing rapid test but it
question:has a result in 15 minutes which test do you want to use to help limit spread in your workplace and
question:the answer is actually very straightforward most people without thinking about speed would say I
question:want the 100% sensitive test. I don't want anyone who's positive to not be detected as positive
question:but actually, if you look at the reality from more of an epidemiological lens speed becomes a much
question:more critical factor and what I'm showing here in this sort of busy slide but i'll break it down
question:there's the identical scenarios on the top of the side and the bottom of the slide but on the top
question:you're using a PCR test that's 100 sensitive and on the bottom you're using a rapid test that is 80
question:sensitive this test used on the top takes two days to return the test using the bottom
question:takes minutes. So in the top scenario, you have five infectious people, in both scenarios, you have five
question:infectious people walking into a workplace and I have them in black and boxed in but the color
question:of the box represents how much viral load they might have, so all five of those are infectious.
question:All five of them get a PCR test, but then they don't get a result back for two days so they spend
question:two days walking around work not knowing that they are spreading the virus, because they're
question:waiting for their PCR results to return and so with this scenario you have collectively five
question:infectious individuals who walk around for two full days before finding out that they're positive.
question:All of them find out that they're positive at the end of the day, at the end of two days.
question:But it took 10 person days of walking around positive and spreading to other people in the
question:workplace be before they found out so that's 10 person days of infectivity in the workplace
question:before they get discovered and that causes them to infect numerous new people and send 20 odd people
question:to quarantine or more now on the bottom we have the exact same five people walk into a workplace
question:but they have a 15 minute turnaround time on their antigen test the rapid test
question:but it's only 80 sensitive and so the person is probably going to miss so it catches for the
question:people immediately and one person 20 of five one person ends up getting through without detection
question:that person was probably very low amount of viral load in the first place and so they were so they
question:probably were not highly, highly infectious but they were able to, they squeaked by, but ultimately
question:they get caught but the important thing was four of them were caught immediately so eventually
question:at the end of the day you have two person days walking around infectious so the 80 rapid test
question:leads to only two person days of infectivity in the workplace versus ten so it's the fast
question:test regardless of its sensitivity that ends up becoming much more critical to limiting spread
question:and in fact you'd have to have an abysmally bad rapid test to be as bad as a PCR test that takes
question:two days to return which but but speed is just generally not really considered in our metrics at
question:the CDC and at the FDA and I think it's been a big failure of of scientists and sort of the medical
question:industry to not recognize how important speed is when we think about the qualities of a test. Yeah,
question:it's been really frustrating actually. Having understood what you said a very long time ago
question:so, right, so my next question is a very important aspect of pandemic management that is omitted for
question:most public health information is the topic of viral load and the role viral load plays in the
question:virus cycle. By way of example for our audience, let's compare two scenarios example one. A person
question:infected with a coronavirus, but not contagious and example two, a person infected and contagious
question:with the ability to transmit or spread the virus to others this is a major aspect of testing that
question:you have just provided an excellent medical and scientific information side about and it's been
question:very confusing and contradicting for non-medical people. So can you please talk about these two
question:examples in the context of viral load and how rapid antigen tests work in comparison to PCR
question:tests within this framework? So what I'm getting at Michael is CT values really, ultimately.
question:Absolutely! And this is one of the most misunderstood aspects of this pandemic. I think
question:especially by physicians oddly and it's there's some history there of why physicians have had such
question:trouble thinking about viral load. Doctors aren't generally trained to think about transmission.
question:Now when the only time we normally think about CT values or the number of cycles it takes for PCR to
question:turn positive, so the more cycles it takes for PCR to turn positive, means the more times you had to
question:amplify the starting amount of RNA which means the lower the viral load was at the beginning
question:normally when we're thinking about CT values in viral diagnostics we're usually thinking about HIV
question:and with HIV it's kind of a binary question oftentimes for diagnostics are you HIV positive
question:or negative and so it doesn't matter if you even have one molecule the infectious disease physician
question:diagnoses you as having HIV and of course if you have a lot of molecules you might really be
question:even sicker but the point is you're HIV positive either way but we actually do think about even in
question:the HIV world we say that yes somebody might have HIV we know that they probably have molecules of
question:HIV inside them but if they are undetectable at such a low level we know that they don't
question:transmit so this idea of transmissibility has started to enter into the medical thinking
question:but with regard to Covid, the issue is really, do we need all of the sensitivity do we need to be
question:detecting somebody who has a very low viral load or who has a very high CT count. CT counts, a very
question:high CT count say 38 or 40 is implies a very, very low viral load they're inversely correlated and so
question:the fact is we don't need to find people with very, very low viral loads if our interest is
question:to detect people who are going to infect others and it turns out that different tests do better
question:at different things so a PCR test will detect you as positive across the whole gamut of viral loads
question:an to a rapid test will only detect you when you're at a high viral load
question:and that actually impacts the sensitivity so the sensitivity of a test is is absolutely related to
question:the amount of virus that you're trying to detect so i'll share a graph that I made
question:quite a while ago and this is from this is from a manuscript from tim keto in the uk
question:who looked at seven different rapid tests and asked what is the sensitivity
question:of each of these tests to detect virus at different amounts of viral load and different
question:amounts of viral load indicate that you have different levels of infectivity to others
question:and so we found was that at for all seven of these tests they were all able to perform with
question:pretty much a hundred percent sensitivity when the viral load was the highest meaning over 10 million
question:copies or even moderately high meaning 1 to 10 million copies all of the tests still had 100
question:sensitivity and it wasn't until you got to pretty moderate, or low viral load that the tests
question:start to drop in sensitivity. So 100,000 to 1 million you're still moderately infectious,
question:but not highly infectious and then the tests are to get to 90% to 95% sensitivity and as you drop
question:below a hundred thousand viral load you start to no longer be infectious you just aren't infectious
question:PCR will still keep being positive but you're you're not likely to be infectious and so finding
question:detecting you as positive at that period of time is much less important than detecting as
question:positive and you have a very high viral load if your goal is to stop somebody from transmitting
question:so on average a test that is across all of the viral loads that might happen
question:in a population at any given time you might have a test that's only 50% sensitive versus PCR but if
question:you look at what are the viral loads we actually care about that very same test might be 97% or 95%
question:sensitive so the sensitivity is absolutely essentially it's essential to look at sensitivity
question:stratified by what you care to ask which is am I infectious or do I have any virus
question:and we see that the sensitivities differ markedly what has happened in the medical literature
question:and that has caused so much confusion is most papers discuss just what is the sensitivity of
question:the antigen test against any viral load and that's what you see here in this white bar in the middle
question:which is any RNA detection that test might only be 50% or 40% sensitive sometimes even only 30%
question:sensitive so people think oh what an abysmally bad test but it's because
question:you're looking you're starting to look for viral loads that are not relevant anymore
question:so if you really key and just on the high viral load people
question:then you see oh wow that same test does very very well and I was being distracted by it not catching
question:people who I no longer care about because they're no longer infectious now an important piece of
question:this is that a lot of people will say well what if that low viral load was the virus on the way up
question:and that's actually something we care about you want to actually detect somebody very early
question:so if their viral load is only a thousand but they're on their way up and they're about to
question:hit a million the next day then that's critical to know the problem is if you you again have to
question:take time into account so I showed this other slide here the time frame in between that it's
question:just very unlikely that you're actually going to swab somebody in that short duration of time
question:when you're in between the two sensitivities so it actually is much less relevant and most
question:of the time that you see PCR being a very low viral load and antigen test being negative is
question:after the infectivity is done and so that's why we really have to be paying attention to virus load
question:when we ask what is the sensitivity sensitivity of the test and I've advocated very strongly to the
question:fda and others unfortunately to a fairly you know have made only moderate headway over the two years
question:is that we should always stratify sensitivity by virus load and that is what would actually give us
question:a better understanding of how good is this test because you could take an abysmally bad test
question:and if you only detect people when they have more than a billion viral particles you could actually
question:make the test look like it's 100% sensitive if you only recruit people into your study
question:who have a billion viral particles or more so you could actually make a really bad test look
question:very good or if you only recruit people who are on day 10 to 20 of their infectiousness or of
question:their infection you could make a very good antigen test look like it has 20%
question:sensitivity so it really depends on where people are in their course of infection
question:and we should know that and think about viral sludge when we think about sensitivity of a test
question:yeah so to really clarify it for the audience high viral load means that you're infectious and
question:contagious a CT value is a logarithmic measurement that which makes it inversely proportional to
question:viral load so a low CT value means that you have loads of virus in you and you're really contagious
question:and a high CT value say above 30 or 40 means that you have very little contagious virus in you and
question:probably won't spread it and my contention is is that we have PCR machines that can
question:give a CT value so when people get their their test repeat from a PCR really they
question:should be given a CT value to say where they are in infectivity what do you feel about that
question:I 100% agree it was actually a paper that I published in April of 2020. I believe
question:in I think it was clinical infectious diseases it was one of the earlier papers on PCR testing
question:in this pandemic and I at that time you know over two two years ago now I was advocating
question:for using the CT value if we're going to ever tell somebody they're PCR positive
question:give them the CT value because what was happening was we had all these patients in the hospital
question:that were positive and they were staying in isolation wards for two months, because they kept
question:being PCR positive and I kept saying you know we should be looking at the CT value and if somebody
question:has a CT value on one day of 38 and on the next day of 38 then they're done
question:with their infection they're no longer infectious their body just hasn't finished clearing that last
question:little bit of RNA but if on the first day of hospitalization they have a CT value of 38 and
question:on the second day they have a CT value of 20. then in that 24 hour period of time they they massively
question:expanded their viral load they definitely need to go into isolation and so or if you just take one
question:PCR CT value and it is a 17 and the first time you take it you know that they're currently infectious
question:they have a very high viral load so the use of the PCR if you're going to use such
question:a profoundly sensitive test that can scale over many orders of magnitude then it is so critical
question:for the physician or public health expert to know well where am I in the course or where
question:is my patient in the course of this infection are they massively infectious and spreading the
question:virus and have a billion viral particles in their nose right now or do they have almost
question:no viral particles and they're probably past their infection and the CT value gives you that
question:information i'll show an interesting slide that I think is just really illustrative of this concept
question:what we normally show for CT values is what I show on the top here actually let me
question:let me rewind here so i'll show a slide to put this all into context what we normally show for CT
question:values is on the top here this is what we normally see for viral loads in a person they go from sort
question:of undetectable levels of virus and then once they pass maybe a hundred viral copies per milliliter
question:that might be in some PCR instruments a CT value of 40. they then go up really quick maybe they get
question:to a CT value of 18 and then they drop down again and finally become undetectable after three weeks
question:or four weeks so this viral load makes it look like you should probably be detecting people
question:out to 20 days for example but if we actually look at what do these CT values actually mean
question:and like you said CT values are logarithmic they actually are on a log scale and so if we take this
question:this same viral load curve that I'm showing and this is sort of that this is a depiction
question:of what somebody's virus might do inside their body since infection so they go from zero they
question:go to really high viral load and back down again to undetectable if we put this on a linear scale
question:how we normally think about virus load as an as any individual might think about virus load the
question:same graph these two graphs are identical they're just changing the scale on the Y axis to one is
question:logarithmic which accentuates low viral numbers and on the bottom it's how we actually think of
question:like how much virus is actually existing and so we can see is almost all of the virus that somebody
question:has in their body occurs in a very short amount of time 99%+ of all of the virus you have
question:occurs from like on this particular person, day four to day seven, you know and after day seven
question:they have pretty much you know very very they've cleared 99 of their virus or more and so this is
question:just so critical to recognize that CT values we we count you know one might think CT value to 40
question:to 30 to 20 it's kind of the same from 40 to 30 and 30 to 20. but actually it's not it's it's a
question:massive difference and that's what happens when we we try to think on logarithmic terms most people
question:in their brain think that it's a linear scale but actually on the bottom here is what virus loads
question:really look like for how people should be thinking about when is when is somebody most infectious
question:great and I must confess to the audience I learned everything I know about this subject
question:from michael I've read all of his research papers time and time again so we're running out of time
question:yeah I know it's true you're fantastic I've got two really important questions I need to ask you
question:the first is about Omicron so the original SARS-CoV-2 symptom onset was around four
question:to six days after becoming infected with the Omicron variant we have experienced
question:an acceleration of symptom onset to the first few days of becoming infected the rapid antigen tests
question:were registering negative and not turning positive until several days after symptom onset for Omicron
question:as a result many scientists have stated that rapid antigen tests do not work for the Omicron variant
question:what is your opinion of this new adaptation of the virus as it relates to rapid antigen tests
question:now this has been one of the most difficult pieces for many people to understand and that's because
question:immunology and testing and virus kinetics these are these are a lot of different areas of science
question:and medicine that most people don't bring together people who understand testing don't usually think
question:as much about immunology and people think about immunology might not think about viral kinetics
question:and actually understanding what's happening here takes synthesizing all three of these together
question:and so what we found with Omicron it's it's one of the most interesting aspects I think that
question:has happened during this pandemic is that people are now starting to get symptomatic with Omicron
question:really early and you might get exposed today and you might become symptomatic tomorrow which is
question:really fast if we think about two years ago with the original variant we would say oh if you get
question:exposed today don't expect to see any symptoms for seven days you know don't even bother testing
question:yourself for five days but now we're seeing people get symptomatic at one day and so people ask the
question:question well is this just because Omicron is so much more aggressive and replicates so fast
question:well that's a little bit of it but it's actually not the majority of it the majority of it is
question:what's happening is Omicron is really good at infecting people who have pre-existing immunity
question:so I've been vaccinated and I got Omicron and that means I had a breakthrough infection and what
question:that means is that I actually had some immunity clearly not enough to stop myself from getting
question:an infection but I had some immunity built up so when I got exposed my body re started to recognize
question:the virus early and it actually created symptoms but the symptoms are different than they were
question:two years ago the early symptoms of Omicron are things like a fever and congestion and those are
question:actually symptoms of your immune system turning on whereas two years ago or even just seven months
question:ago the symptoms of Covid were loss of smell and difficulty breathing and those were symptoms
question:of the virus destroying your body so people can have symptoms for very different reasons
question:and so what's happening with Omicron is that an individual gets infected and their immune system
question:creates the symptoms the next day their body is like sending all kinds of red flags up saying
question:whoa whoa whoa you know I recognize this virus because I've been vaccinated and boosted so then
question:people are becoming symptomatic before the virus even has a chance to grow up and be detectable
question:in that you're still in that incubation phase of the virus when your body is turning on red
question:flags and saying hey I think I'm infected so we should actually use that as an early warning sign
question:but unfortunately what's happened is people then use a test during that period of time
question:and the test register is negative and they say what the heck you know I thought that
question:tests are supposed to be positive when I'm symptomatic because people have equated symptoms
question:with being infectious and having high virus load but that's not true in an era of Omicron and
question:breakthrough infections symptoms are oftentimes a reflection of your immune system turning on and
question:actually I'd be almost more worried about somebody who doesn't have any symptoms who's infected and
question:because their their immune system clearly is might not be doing what it's supposed to be doing to
question:really stop spread so we actually saw evidence of this where well so to go back what this
question:is showing in the population now is people are using antigen tests on the first day of symptom
question:onset or PCR tests and they're getting a negative result and then they're getting a negative result
question:on day two and day three they might be turning positive and so they say oh these tests don't
question:work anymore for Omicron well that's actually not true if we go back to the recommendation
question:a year ago it was don't even bother testing yourself for four to six days after you've been
question:exposed so the same thing holds still the virus hasn't changed to make its replication much much
question:faster it's that your body is just identifying the virus faster sending up warning signals
question:in the form of symptoms trying to battle the virus early before it even has a chance to grow
question:so for many people they might be symptomatic and might never become antigen test positive because
question:their body did what it was supposed to do and it actually beats the virus down you still might
question:detect it on PCR for other people they might turn positive two days after symptom onsite because
question:the virus had a chance to grow up and become infectious and we actually have evidence what
question:we found we looked at health care workers who were infected and getting tested and returning back to
question:work at five days into isolation and what we found was rather extraordinary we found that healthcare
question:workers who were recently boosted with a vaccine were the most likely to still be infectious
question:at five days after symptom onset so they were per CDC guidance, which I don't agree with.
question:They were coming back to work at five days into, after isolation, after isolating for five days
question:and the boosted people were much more likely to still be infectious than the non-boosted people
question:so you could ask the question. Well that's weird. Are boosted people somehow not clearing the virus
question:better? No that's not the right way to look at it. What's actually happening is that boosted
question:people have so much immune activity that their body recognizes the virus really fast
question:and so they start the isolation clock really early. So they were starting the isolation clock
question:days before they even had a detectable viral load, based on their symptom onset. So by the
question:time they were leaving isolation at five days, they were at the peak virus load. Because their,
question:immune system turned on within a day or two of becoming exposed and then they
question:didn't have their peak virus until four days later. So we actually see sort of circumstantial evidence
question:suggesting that breakthrough infections you become symptomatic even before the virus really
question:has a chance to grow up and that's the primary reason why so many people are still negative
question:on their first two days it's that they're still in that incubation window. When
question:two years ago we knew that no test would turn positive in that period of time and that still is
question:the case today. It's just the window of symptoms has shifted, not the window of viral replication.
question:Right, so if you have Omicron, I'm going to be very quick because we're three minutes over, if
question:you have Omicron and you are testing positive five days into your infection and testing positive for
question:10 days or onwards, you're actually contagious. So even though your symptoms might have gone
question:it's not that the antigen test isn't working, because I think you've showed really that antigen
question:tests good ones validated ones are 100 percent sensitive during the contagious period so if your
question:antigen test is registering registering positive at day 10 to 15 to 20 you're actually contagious.
question:That's right. You should always expect that and that just takes a little bit of understanding how
question:these rapid antigen tests work if you have enough virus protein so that you can actually see a line
question:on a rapid test that means you have a lot of virus protein there and the only way
question:you have that kind of virus protein is a virus is actively replicating and you're likely contagious.
question:So my recommendation to anyone is, if you're in isolation and you're thinking of leaving,
question:especially if you're leaving early. Test yourself before you leave. If you're positive,
question:assume that you are infectious and if you're positive, even if it's 13 days into your infection
question:into your symptoms, assume that you are still infectious. An antigen test
question:does not stay positive if you're not likely infectious and it's really important to know that.
question:My grandfather unfortunately is in a senior living facility he's 96 and a lot of people just got the
question:BA.2 in his facility this is just last week and they hit the 10-day mark and they said okay, nobody's
question:infectious anymore after 10 days of symptom onset. You can take off your mask, stop quarantining,
question:stop isolating and even if people are positive still, they were saying don't worry about it
question:you're not infectious. That is absolutely wrong. We should not assume that just because 10 days
question:is up that you're not infectious. If the test remains positive and it's a rapid antigen test,
question:assume you are still infectious. Thank you so much for clarifying that because so many physicians are
question:going around saying that the antigen tests are not working, ignore that positive result and re-expose
question:yourself to society and I know that your findings have been replicated in Japan and Taiwan, so I
question:know it's not just your team that have that have shown this. So we're out of time unfortunately,
question:I could talk to you for another hour. Thank you so much for joining us. Thank you so much for the
question:work you do. I think I've said many a time you're brilliant and I think your audience can see why
question:Dr. Mina's teachings have changed my whole perspective of medicine. Thank you for taking
question:the time for being with us today and providing such valuable and worthwhile information
question:and thank you for sort of striving valiantly to help us to manage this pandemic properly.
question:Well thank you so much and I do hope that people have learned something and certainly you know
question:if people want more information, my Twitter feed is full of it. I'm sure we can put that in the in
question:the text here but yes, definitely I would highly recommend you follow Dr Mina's Twitter feed. I do!
question:Thanks for listening to this week's episode of COVID 19 The Answers. If you enjoyed the episode,
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