The current discharge criteria for COVID-19 require that patients have 2 consecutive negative results for reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) detection. Here, we observed that recurrent positive RT-PCR test results in patients with 3 consecutive negative results (5.4%) were significantly decreased compared with those in patients with 2 consecutive negative results (20.6%); such patients reported positive RT-PCR test results within 1 to 12 days after meeting the discharge criteria. These results confirmed that many recovered patients could show a positive RT-PCR test result, and most of these patients could be identified by an additional RT-PCR test prior to discharge.
CITATION STYLE
Zou, Y., Wang, B. R., Sun, L., Xu, S., Kong, Y. G., Shen, L. J., … Chen, S. M. (2020). The Issue of Recurrently Positive Patients Who Recovered from COVID-19 According to the Current Discharge Criteria: Investigation of Patients from Multiple Medical Institutions in Wuhan, China. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 222(11), 1784–1788. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiaa301
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