“…to diagnose disease), whereas many of those now being tested are asymptomatic. Although a clinically significant proportion of those with infection have no symptoms (with estimates varying from under 50% to around 75%) [ 15 , 20 , 21 ], nevertheless the proportion of the entire asymptomatic general population with infection will be much smaller than the proportion of the symptomatic population with infection. Further, the absence of symptoms suggests different within-host viral dynamics and immune response, meaning it is not possible to extrapolate reliably from a test's performance in symptomatic individuals to ascertain a performance in asymptomatic individuals.…”