Clinical meaning
Confirmatory and repeat testing follows initial screening results to establish or exclude a diagnosis with greater certainty. Confirmatory tests have higher specificity than screening tests, reducing false-positive rates. Repeat testing accounts for pre-analytical variables (specimen handling, patient preparation), biological variation (diurnal variation, acute illness effects), and laboratory error. The concept of test-retest reliability ensures consistent results. Examples include: HIV screening (4th-gen Ag/Ab test) confirmed by HIV-1/2 differentiation assay; diabetes screening (random glucose or A1c) confirmed by repeating on a separate day; CKD diagnosis requiring two abnormal eGFR values ≥3 months apart to distinguish from AKI. Understanding when to repeat vs confirm vs accept results improves diagnostic efficiency and reduces unnecessary testing.
Diagnosis & workup
Diagnostics & workup: - Diabetes: requires TWO abnormal values on separate occasions for diagnosis (fasting glucose ≥126, A1c ≥6.5%, OGTT ≥200) unless symptomatic with random glucose ≥200 (one test sufficient) - HIV: reactive 4th-gen screening → confirmatory HIV-1/2 differentiation assay; if differentiation indeterminate → HIV-1 RNA (NAT) - CKD: two eGFR values <60 or two UACR values ≥30, ≥3 months apart (distinguishes from AKI) - Thyroid: abnormal TSH → confirm with free T4 (and free T3 if hyperthyroidism suspected) - Syphilis: traditional algorithm: non-treponemal test (RPR/VDRL) confirmed by treponemal test (FTA-ABS); reverse algorithm: treponemal test first confirmed by RPR - Hepatitis B: HBsAg positive → confirm with HBsAg neutralization assay or repeat in 2-4 weeks - Critical values: repeat immediately if result is unexpected and doesn't match clinical picture before acting on it