Utility of routine post-admission testing for SARS-CoV-2 in a rehabilitation facility

Asymptomatic screening for SARS-CoV-2 is recommended in healthcare settings during periods of increased incidence, yet studies in rehabilitation settings are lacking. Routine weekly post-admission asymptomatic testing in a rehabilitation facility offered marginal gain beyond syndromic and targeted unit testing and was not associated with a reduced risk of healthcare-associated COVID-19.

patients are a potential source of transmission in healthcare settings. 1The Centers for Disease Control recommends SARS-CoV-2 testing for symptomatic patients, and asymptomatic testing at the time of admission, following exposure and in the event of suspected health-associated transmission but do not address routine asymptomatic post-admission screening. 2In one study in an acute care hospital, introduction of a 7-day recurring asymptomatic testing protocol led to an increase in detection of COVID-19 cases. 3ehabilitation facilities are conducive to respiratory virus transmission due to the patient population and their mobilization in shared spaces. 4We hypothesized that routine weekly asymptomatic testing for SARS-CoV-2 in a rehabilitation hospital experiencing frequent COVID-19 outbreaks, may reduce the burden of healthcare-associated COVID-19.
We performed an uncontrolled before-after intervention study comparing baseline (April 1, 2021 to March 31, 2022) and intervention (April 1, 2022 to March 31, 2023) periods at a 154bed rehabilitation hospital associated with a tertiary care acute care hospital.The facility has only 14(9%) single rooms and 50% of beds are in four-bed ward rooms.At baseline, mid-turbinate swabs were collected by nursing staff on all patients and tested for SARS-CoV-2 on admission (≤5 days), in response to the development of new symptoms consistent with COVID-19 infection (syndromic testing), following exposure to a patient with COVID-19 and as part of unit wide prevalence testing during suspected or confirmed outbreaks.The testing platform was a reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay performed in a laboratory affiliated with our healthcare facilty. 5n addition to all pre-existing SARS-CoV-2 testing, the intervention introduced April 1, 2022, added routine weekly unit-wide asymptomatic prevalence screening whereby all patients on a given unit were tested on the same day.Prospective assessment was performed to identify cases of acute SARS-CoV-2 infection, defined as a patient testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 who had not been previously infected with COVID-19. 6Specifically, cases with documented COVID-19 within 90 days or with a cycle threshold (CT) value ≥28.0 who remained asymptomatic and had a repeat confirmatory swab that was negative or with CT value persistently ≥28.0 were considered recovered cases and excluded. 6he primary outcome was the yield of routine post-admission screening in comparison to the admission, outbreak-related and syndromic testing that was already in place.The secondary outcome was the incidence of healthcare associated-COVID-19 (HA-COVID) per 1,000 non-COVID-19 patient-days, defined as a COVID-19 case with a positive RT-PCR test or symptom onset ≥5 days after admission or <5 days following transfer to our organization's associated acute care facility.Relative risk (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) was used to compare percent positivity and HA-COVID incidence between the two periods.Infection prevention policies during both periods included universal masking for all healthcare workers (HCWs) and visitors, and transmission-based precautions (N95 respirator, eye protection, gowns and gloves) for all patients with suspected or confirmed COVID-19.Data was collected prospectively as part of routine surveillance and research ethics review was not required because the study met institutional criteria for exemption as quality improvement.
The marginal impact of routine SARS-CoV-2 post-admission testing in a rehabilitation facility experiencing significant healthcare-associated COVID-19 has several potential explanations.First, vigilant syndromic surveillance and contact tracing of confirmed cases of COVID-19 as well as prompt asymptomatic prevalence testing in response to nosocomial activity identified the majority of the cases that developed post-admission.A similar weekly testing protocol in an acute care hospital detected 40 cases of COVID-19 among admitted patients who tested negative for SARS-CoV-2 on admission, yet further investigation determined that 70% had documented symptoms of COVID-19 infection that should have been picked up on syndromic surveillance. 3The second possibility is that our testing protocol may have been too infrequent to contribute significantly to case detection.A simulation study of Chin et al reported that although once-weekly testing may be sufficient when community incidence is lower and additional interventions are in place, twice-weekly asymptomatic testing was required to reduce the number of cases of COVID-19 and prevent outbreaks in high-risk settings during periods of high community transmission. 7A separate modeling study in a mental health setting found that once weekly testing reduced risk of an outbreak by 49% while twice weekly reduced it by 67%. 8here are significant limitations to our study.First, it was a single center uncontrolled study in a rehabilitation facility and may not be applicable to other healthcare settings.However, given that post-admission asymptomatic screening was low yield in our facility with a majority of multi-bed rooms it may be even less useful in a rehabilitation hospital with newer infrastructure.Second, the increase in HA-COVID during the intervention period was likely related to the increased transmissibility associated with the Omicron variant throughout the intervention period as compared to ancestral SARS-CoV-2 variants circulating during the baseline period. 9,10These increased cases were detected through usual syndromic and investigation-driven surveillance and not through routine post-admission testing.Third, due to limited availability of testing during the study period, community positivity rates are not available for comparison.The increased admission testing positivity remains a surrogate for the higher community burden during the intervention period.Finally, we do not know if more frequent asymptomatic post-admission testing would reduce the risk of transmission in the rehabilitation setting.
The resources required to sustain a program that routinely tests more than weekly made it unfeasible to implement.
In a rehabilitation setting, the addition of routine weekly asymptomatic prevalence testing of patients was of low yield when added to existing surveillance in place.These findings do not support routine weekly post-admission testing in rehabilitation.

Table 1 .
Characteristics of asymptomatic testing for SARS-CoV-2 in a rehabilitation setting and the incidence of healthcare-associated-COVID-19 before and after implementation of weekly prevalence screening Note.IQR, interquartile rate; HA-COVID, healthcare-associated-COVID-19.