
Tens of thousands of Britons given Covid-19 may have wrongly been told they were free of the virus because of the tests the government uses, research suggests.
Scientists analysed the accuracy of self-collected nasal swabs, like the ones used at drive-through test centres and sent out in the post across the UK.
They were compared to nasopharyngeal swabs — which are conducted by medics and are inserted so deep into the nose they can make people gag, their eyes water or even trigger nosebleeds — and saliva tests.
Scientists found only 70 of 86 people who had Covid-19 were picked up by nasal swabs, which only need to be gently swilled around the nostril.
The nasopharyngeal swabs and saliva tests were not perfect either but did detect more cases — 80 and 81, respectively.
Although the researchers admitted it is not a huge amount of ‘wrong’ results and that the results were not statistically significant, experts have repeatedly warned that any missed case can have consequences.
If a person who is positive for Covid-19 receives a false negative result, they will not self-isolate and may spread the virus to other people.
The findings could apply to the nasal swabs provided by the government. But the study did not compare throat swabs which patients in Britain are also asked to take themselves.
More than 11million tests have been conducted across the UK, most of which would have been self-administered.
Professionally-done nasopharyngeal tests are known to be uncomfortable because the swab must go so far back into the person’s nose (Pictured: A man getting tested in Surabaya, Indonesia)



Public Health England instructions for taking a DIY home test kit
The tests people take themselves at drive-through centres or in the comfort of their own home are far less invasive than nasopharyngeal swabs — what is considered the gold standard by scientists.
In the kit, there are instructions to use a singular swab around the back of the throat as well as the nostril.
This can make people feel sick or tickle, but the swab is not pushed deep inside the nostril to reach the nose ‘floor’ — as it would be with nasopharyngeal swabs.
Experts say anterior nasal swabs have less contact with the mucous membranes, which are areas of thin tissue inside the airways where most of the coronaviruses live.
Instructions given to Britons shipped the postal tests say: ‘No force is needed and you do not have to push far into your nostril.’
One benefit is that because they are less invasive, they are unlikely to make a patient cough — meaning that healthcare workers are less likely to be exposed to the virus.
Professor Paul Hunter, an infectious disease expert at the University of East Anglia, said the study findings ‘certainly suggests these DIY tests are not as good and miss a proportion’.
He claimed around 10 per cent of coronavirus tests that would have been spotted by the nasopharyngeal swabs test would be missed by the at-home test.
But Professor Hunter told MailOnline the study does not prove the tests are useless and called for larger trials of the swabs currently being used in the UK.
He said: ‘This study is fairly small and it needs to be repeated using a larger number of tests, preferably in the UK, before we draw reliable conclusions.’
The study, not yet published in a medical journal or peer-reviewed by fellow experts, was carried out across hospitals in Utah.
At a drive-thru test center, 354 people took all three Covid-19 tests; they were instructed to swab both nostrils, called an anterior nasal swab test, spit into a tube, and then a medic conducted the nasopharyngeal swab.
Some 268 people received a negative result across the board. Eighty-six people got a positive result either from one, two, or three or the tests.
No singular test produced 86 results, proving that no test is able to always detect the coronavirus.
Sixty-six patients had SARS-CoV-2 detected in all three tests, meaning they undoubtedly had the virus.
But 13 were detected in only two tests, and seven patients got a positive result from one test.
It means that, had any of these 20 patients had a singular test, their result may have returned as negative.
The seven who tested positively from one test were made up of two nasopharyngeal swabs and five saliva tests — meaning the nasal swabs did not singularly pick up the virus at any point.
The results broke down how many results were given by each testing method, to find that anterior nasal swabs gave a positive result the least amount of times.
The differences in results ‘did not reach statistical significance’ because the numbers are so small, the paper on medRxiv said.
However, the researchers wrote: ‘Relying on anterior nasal swabs alone could have missed infection in 10 to 11 patients compared with nasopharyngeal swabs or saliva, respectively.
‘Missed Covid-19 cases have major clinical implications affecting isolation decisions for symptomatic 111 patients and are a lost opportunity for contact tracing.’

How nasopharyngeal swabs are conducted: Paediatric nurse practitioner Jessica Peck shared a diagram of how the coronavirus test is carried out on Twitter and said: ‘This is how far back we have to put the swab to test you for #COVID19z. You might want to follow medical recommendations and #StayAtHome’

How coronavirus self-tests are conducted: They require the patient to put the swab into the back of their throat and then a short way into their nostril to try and pick up the viruses, which live in the airways
When the researchers cross-referenced the tests with each other, they found ‘excellent agreement’. This means that, in most cases, the tests produced the same result – either negative or positive.
Results showed if a nasopharyngeal swab was taken alongside an anterior swab then the results were the same 86.3 per cent of the time.
If a a nasopharyngeal swab was taken alongside a straight saliva test, there was a 93.8 per cent chance the results were accurate.
This, the researchers said, that the highest number of cases would be detected when combining nasopharyngeal swabs with a saliva test.
The researchers noted: ‘Nasopharyngeal swabs have historically been considered the reference method for respiratory virus detection.
‘In addition, anterior nasal swabs are used routinely for influenza nucleic acid amplification testing (NAAT).
‘Recurrent shortages of swabs and personal protective equipment (PPE), however, have prompted evaluation of alternatives to NPS including the use of patient self-collected ANS and saliva.’
The Department of Health and Social Care refuted the findings, saying the evidence shows self-tests are ‘just as effective’.
A spokesperson told MailOnline: ‘Instructions on how to perform these types of tests are included wherever individuals are asked to undertake self-swabbing.’
Scientists first warned about self-tests being less accurate in June after Britain began started to ramp up its swabbing capacity at the end of April.
Dr Andrew Preston, an infectious lung disease expert at the University of Bath, told MailOnline that shallower swabs in the nose and mouth were not as good.
He said: ‘It’s clear the deeper into the nasopharynx, the better it is picking up the virus.’
Dr Preston added: ‘I work a lot with whooping cough, and we tilt the person’s head right back.
‘We consider it an unsuccessful swab unless the eyes water. We see real, real issues with the sensitivity of the swab if swabbing in nose.’
In a clear warning about how self-tests could miss the infection, he said: ‘The further back you go, the more chance you’ve got of getting the virus.’
Even nasopharyngeal swab tests carried out by professionals are estimated to be inaccurate in up to 30 per cent of cases due to variations in how medics carry them out.
This is based on scientists’ estimations, because the Department of Health will not release data about the false negative rates of its tests.
It is not clear how inaccurate self-swabs are, even though they are being carried out more than 60,000 times a day in the UK.
Professor Jon Deeks, a biostatistics expert at the University of Birmingham, said: ‘A single negative test result doesn’t exclude the disease.’
It is believed that nasopharyngeal swabs are more reliable because they are better at picking up traces of a virus.
They go much deeper into the nasopharynx, a cavity in the airway which connects to the throat.
Medics get a sample from along the ‘floor’ of the nose near the mucous membranes — areas of thin tissue inside the airways where most of the coronaviruses live.
Claire Cox, an intensive care outreach nurse working in Brighton, said in May that using the correct technique was crucial.
In a blog on Patient Safety Learning, she wrote: ‘Simply swabbing the inside of the nasal passage is not deep enough to verify that the virus is present.’
These swabs have become notorious for being uncomfortable because they require an extra-long cotton bud to be forced into the back of the nostril and rotated.
They can make people gag, make their eyes water or even trigger nosebleeds – but they are considered the most accurate way of diagnosing Covid-19.