Skip to main content
CA.Gov State of California Logo
en EspaƱol Contact Us About News & Media Jobs/Careers
+ Increase Text Resize Reset to Default - Decrease
CDPH Site Logo
CDPH Site Logo
  • Text Size
      • + Increase Increase
      • - DecreaseDecrease
      • Reset to Default Reset to Default
  • I am looking for
      • What’s New

      • 2025 State of Public Health Testimony

      • CDPH New Look

      • H5N1 Bird Flu

      • Respiratory Virus Report

      • Tips for After an Earthquake

      • Wildfire Preparedness and Safety

      • Administrative

      • All Local Health Jurisdiction Letters & Notices

      • Budget Highlights

      • Boards and Advisory Committees

      • Forms

      • Language Access Services Program

      • Local Health Services/Offices

      • Public Records Act Request

      • Proposed Regulations

      • Proposition 56 Fiscal Reporting

      • Diseases and Conditions

      • Cancer

      • COVID-19

      • Diabetes

      • Diseases and Conditions

      • Disease Reporting

      • Healthcare-Associated Infections

      • HIV/AIDS

      • Mpox

      • Problem Gambling

      • Respiratory Viruses

      • Sexually Transmitted Diseases

      • See More
      • Family Health

      • Breastfeeding

      • Genetic Disease Screening

      • Mental Health

      • Nutrition and Physical Activity

      • Pregnancy and Reproductive Health

      • Women, Infants and Children

      • Health and Safety

      • Climate Change and Health

      • Emergency Preparedness

      • Environmental Health

      • Health in all Policies

      • Workplace Health

      • Health Facilities

      • File a Complaint

      • California Health Facilities Information Database

      • Personal Health and Prevention

      • Behavioral Health

      • Cannabis (Marijuana)

      • Immunizations

      • Nutrition

      • Quit Smoking

      • Licensing, Certification and Other Credentials

      • Certificates, Licenses, Permits and Registrations

      • Health Care Facility Licenses

      • Health Care Professionals

      • Laboratory

      • Medical Professional Licenses

      • Medical Waste

      • Pet Importation and Exportation

      • Radiation and Nuclear

      • Registered Environmental Health Specialist

      • Vital Records

      • X-ray Machine Registration

  • I am a
      • Clinician / Healthcare Provider

      • Legislator / Legislative Staff

      • Media Representative

      • Researcher / Statistician

      • Person Interested In

      • Infant and Child Health

      • Men’s Health

      • Senior Health

      • Women’s Health

      • Youth and Young Adult's Health

      • LGBT Health

  • Programs
      • Center for Healthy Communities

      • California Tobacco Control

      • Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention

      • Chronic Disease Control

      • Chronic Disease Surveillance and Research

      • Emergency Preparedness

      • See More
      • Center for Preparedness and Response

      • Be Prepared California

      • Know and Understand Natural Disasters

      • Center for Family Health

      • Genetic Disease Screening Program

      • Maternal, Child and Adolescent Health

      • Women, Infants and Children

      • Center for Health Care Quality

      • Healthcare-Associated Infections Program

      • Licensing and Certification

      • Center for Health Statistics and Informatics

      • End of Life Option Act

      • Medical Marijuana Identification Card Program

      • Research and Analytics Branch

      • Vital Records

      • Center for Infectious Diseases

      • HIV/AIDS

      • Binational Border Health

      • Communicable Disease Control

      • Communicable Disease Emergency Response

      • Refugee Health

      • See More
      • Director / State Public Health Officer

      • Legislative and Governmental Affairs

      • Let's Talk Cannabis

      • Office of Health Equity

      • Office of Communications

      • See More
      • Center for Environmental Health

      • Division of Food and Drug Safety

      • Division of Radiation Safety and Environmental Management

      • See More
      • Center for Laboratory Sciences

      • Division of Environmental Health Laboratories

      • Infectious Diseases Laboratory Division

      • Laboratory Field Services

      • Office of State Public Health Laboratory Director

      • Operations Branch

      • See More
      • Other CDPH Offices

      • Privacy Office

      • Office of Regulations

      • See More
  • A-Z Index
Division of Communicable Disease Control

Skip Navigation LinksCDPH-Guidance-on-the-Use-of-Antigen-Tests-for-Diagnosis-of-Acute-COVID-19
 

Top Menu
  • Division of Communicable Disease ControlCurrently selected
    • CAIR
Skip Navigation LinksDivision of Communicable Disease Control > Pages > COVID-19 > CDPH-Guidance-on-the-Use-of-Antigen-Tests-for-Diagnosis-of-Acute-COVID-19
  • Home
  • Programs
  • Center for Infectious Diseases
  • Division of Communicable Disease Control
  • CDPH Guidance on the Use of Antigen Tests for Diagnosis of Acute COVID-19
Left Menu
  • RecentCurrently selected
  • CalREDIE
  • CalREDIE Contact Us
  • CDER Contact Us
  • CDER Information for Health Professionals
  • CDER Resources
  • Chlamydia
  • Communicable Disease Emergency Response Program
  • DCDC Contact Us
  • DCDC Information for Local Health Departments
  • DCDC Resources
  • Gonorrhea
  • Hepatitis C
  • Infectious Diseases Branch
  • Interpreting Zika Virus Test Results
  • Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
  • Sexually Transmitted Diseases Control Branch
  • Syphilis
  • TBCBContactUs
  • Trichomoniasis
  • VRDL Guidelines for Specimen Collection and Submission for Pathologic Testing




COVID-19 Menu
CDPH Logo
Sandra Shewry
Acting Director
Erica S. Pan, MD, MPH
Acting State Health Officer
State of Cal Logo
Gavin Newsom
Governor

State of California—Health and Human Services Agency
California Department of Public Health


September 12, 2020


TO:
All Californians

SUBJECT:
CDPH Guidance on the Use of Antigen Tests for Diagnosis of Acute COVID-19

Skip to main content
Page Alert Details

​Note: This Guidance is no longer in effect and is for historical purposes only. ā€‹ā€‹ā€‹ā€‹


LetterAuthority

​Related Materials: Antigen Testing Fact Sheet (PDF) | Antigen, PCR, and Serology Testing Fact Sheet (PDF) | Antigen, PCR, and Serology Testing Guidance (PDF) | More Healthcare & Testing Guidance | All Guidance | More Languages


LetterContentArea

What is an antigen test?

  • Antigen tests directly detect fragments of SARS-CoV-2 viral protein (as opposed to viral RNA detected by nucleic acid amplification tests [NAAT aka PCR tests]).

  • The main advantages of antigen tests are fast turnaround time, simple to perform point-of-care use, identification of current viral infection, and lower cost.

  • The main drawbacks are lower sensitivity (more false negatives) and intended use limited to individuals suspected of COVID-19 within 5-12 days of symptom onset (number of days varies by manufacturer).

  • Positive results in symptomatic individuals are likely to reflect an active infection, but negative tests are presumptive negative and depending on level of clinical concern may need to be confirmed with a NAAT/PCR.

  • A negative antigen test may not exclude infection and is of insufficient sensitivity to make decisions about discontinuing isolation.

  • Antigen tests are approved by the FDA for use on symptomatic individuals. No antigen test has yet been yet approved by the FDA for use on asymptomatic individuals.

  • If an antigen test is used outside the recommended window from symptom onset or to test asymptomatic individuals, false positive results can occur. Depending on the level of tolerance for potential false positive results, confirmatory NAAT may be indicated.

Rapid antigen tests for COVID-19 diagnosis in symptomatic individuals

  • The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) maintains a list of in vitro diagnostic tests for COVID-19 that are approved under an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA). Only FDA EUA-approved viral diagnostic tests should be used. Current antigen tests with FDA EUA are approved as Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA) of 1988 waived, point-of-care tests:

               1) Quidel Sofia SARS Antigen FIA assay

               2) BD Veritor System for Rapid Detection of SARS-CoV-2

               3) LumiraDx SARS-CoV-2 Antigen Test

               4) Abbott BinaxNOW COVID-19 Ag CARD

Performance of antigen tests

Sensitivity and specificity are measures of a test's ability to correctly classify a person as having a disease or not having a disease.

  • Sensitivity refers to a test's ability to designate an individual with disease as positive. A highly sensitive test means that there are few false negative results, and thus fewer cases of disease are missed.

  • Specificity refers to a test's ability to designate an individual who does not have a disease as negative. A highly specific test means that there are few false positive results.

Performance Characteristics of EUA-Approved Assays

 Quidel Sofia-2
BD VeritorAbbott BinaxNOWLumiraDx
Recommended use (in number of days since symptom onset)
5
5
7
12
Positive percent agreement with PCR96.7%84.0%
97.1%
(95% CI: 85.1%-99.9%
97.6%
(95% CI: 91.6%-99.3%)
Specificity100%
100%98.5%97%


Antigen test processing specifications
  • Current antigen tests detect the nucleocapsid protein of SARS-CoV-2 from a swab of a patient's nasal passage. Results are qualitative. A special machine may be needed.
  • Dry swabs should be used for all tests. Transport medium should not be used. False positive test results have been reported when swabs are placed in viral transport medium prior to testing.
  • Specimens should be tested as soon as possible after collection.

Interpretation of positive test results

  • A positive test result in a symptomatic individual indicates that SARS-CoV-2 antigen was detected and that the individual is very likely infected and presumed to be contagious. Positive individuals should be isolated per California Department of Public Health guidance.
  • A positive test result in an asymptomatic individual has the potential to be a false positive result.  Asymptomatic individuals with a positive result should be considered to be cases and managed as such.  In these situations, the individual with the positive test result should be isolated until confirmatory NAAT/PCR testing can be performed and results returned. 
  • Confirmatory nucleic acid testing following a positive antigen test may not be necessary when the pretest probability is high, especially if the person has a known exposure.
  • False positive results are more likely to occur if the clinical suspicion and pre-test probability for COVID-19 is low.

Interpretation of negative test results

  • Negative results for all antigen tests are considered presumptive negative.
  • Asymptomatic individuals with presumptive negative tests in a congregate setting outbreak investigation with confirmed cases may need confirmatory NAAT/PCR testing.
  • Symptomatic individuals with presumptive negative tests should be isolated until confirmatory NAAT/PCR testing can be performed and results returned.

When is it appropriate to use an antigen test?

  • Antigen tests are most reliable when used on symptomatic individuals in populations with a high prevalence of disease. The goal is to quickly identify and isolate contagious individuals. A positive result would inform immediate, specific clinical, infection control, or public health action. In this setting, there is less concern about false positive results.
  • Antigen tests are also useful in high prevalence serial testing environments (i.e. congregate living settings, high-risk essential workers, work settings, particularly anywhere in health care, and in outbreak investigations.
  • Antigen tests are well suited for areas with little access to testing where access to frequent testing may be advantageous
  • Results from antigen tests should always be interpreted in the context of the exposure history and clinical presentation.

Examples of scenarios in which SARS-CoV-2 antigen tests may reasonably be used:

  • Symptomatic patients within the appropriate window for a given test and in settings with high rates of transmission.
  • To rapidly triage patients in an Emergency Department or similar setting.
  • Serialtesting and outbreak investigations in congregate living settings with confirmed cases, such as correctional facilities, long-term care facilities or other high-risk settings, particularly when PCR testing is limited or turnaround time is prolonged, e.g. >72 hours.
  • Remote populations (e.g. rural hospitals, tribal nations, etc.) with limited access to testing.
  • If antigen tests are used for asymptomatic testing (e.g. routine screening or pre-admission testing in congregate settings where there are no confirmed cases of COVID 19), repeat testing at set interval(s) can alleviate the lower sensitivity of antigen tests.

Testing facilities

Facilities that perform only CLIA-waived tests must possess either a CLIA Certificate of Waiver or a Certificate of Compliance. These locations may include long-term care facilities, hospitals, prisons, physician offices, urgent care clinics, outreach clinics, pharmacies and temporary patient care settings. Persons performing the point-of-care test must be trained to perform the test, but these sites have no routine regulatory testing oversight and no testing personnel requirements. If a large volume of tests is anticipated, such as in a skilled nursing facility, this may require full-time staff during weeks when response driven testing is performed.

Reporting of antigen test results

  • For clinical care and for public health investigation and follow-up purposes, all patients with positive antigen test results should be considered true cases.
  • However, for the purpose of surveillance, per the most recent updated interim CSTE case definition for COVID-19, positive antigen tests are considered presumptive, rather than confirmatory laboratory evidence of acute infection. Per the case definition, if "the patient has tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 by an antigen test of a respiratory secretion" they are considered probable cases for public health reporting purposes.
  • Laboratories performing antigen tests are required by California law to report positive and negative results to public health agencies in the same way as other reportable test results.
  • Non-laboratory settings conducting antigen tests must report positive and negative antigen test results to the local health department where the patient resides.  Please contact your local health department for reporting instructions.

CDPH will update this guidance as more data become available.

Resources

  • Food and Drug Administration. Performance characteristics of EUA-approved assays have been published in the "Instructions for Use" links on the FDA website. 
    • BD Veritor SARS-CoV-2 Antigen  
    • Quidel Sofia SARS Antigen FIA
    • LumiraDx SARS-CoV-2 Antigen Test   
    • Abbott BinaxNOW COVID-19 Ag CARD   
  • Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists. Update to the standardized surveillance case definition and national notification for 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19), Interim-20-ID-02.
  • Ramdas K, Darzi A, Jain S. 'Test, re-test, re-test': using inaccurate tests to greatly increase the accuracy of COVID-19 testing. Nat Med. 2020;26(6):810-811. doi:10.1038/s41591-020-0891-7

Originally Published on Septemeber 12, 2020


Public Health Accredited Health Department Logo
California Department of Public Health
PO Box, 997377, MS 0500, Sacramento, CA 95899-7377
Department Website (cdph.ca.gov)
PHAB
For General Public Information
  • (916) 558-1784
  • Contact Us
  • Web Accessibility Certification
  • Download pdf viewer
  • Feedback
  • Jobs/Careers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap
  • Use Policy
Useful Links
  • Visit Governor's Website
  • State Agency Directory
  • CA Health & Human Services
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Visit CDPH on Instagram for the latest updates and health tips. Follow CDPH on Facebook to stay informed and connected. Explore professional updates and news from CDPH on LinkedIn. Watch health-related videos and get updates from CDPH on YouTube. Stay up to date with tweets and announcements from CDPH on X. Get the latest information and stay informed with CDPH on Bluesky. Connect and engage with CDPH on Threads to get the latest updates.