Signs and symptoms to determine if a patient presenting in primary care or hospital outpatient settings has COVID-19

No SJR dataMay 20, 2022The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Symptoms that help identify COVID-19 in patients at primary care or hospital outpatient clinics

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Abstract

Among 52,608 participants across 42 studies, the prevalence of COVID-19 varied from 3.7% to 60.6%, with a median of 27.4%.

  • Most individual symptoms evaluated have low diagnostic accuracy for COVID-19.
  • Cough is associated with a sensitivity of 62.4% and a specificity of 45.4%, making it a potential indicator for further testing.
  • Fever has a sensitivity of 37.6% and a specificity of 75.2%, indicating limited usefulness as a standalone symptom.
  • Anosmia and ageusia have low sensitivity (26.4% and 23.2% respectively) but high specificity (over 90%), suggesting they may serve as red flags for COVID-19.
  • Combinations of symptoms with additional contextual information may increase diagnostic accuracy, with some models achieving sensitivities up to 90%.
  • Neither the presence nor absence of symptoms is reliable enough to decisively rule in or out COVID-19.

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