Testing for the new coronavirus in the U.S. may ramp up quickly after
the Food and Drug Administration said it would speed approval of tests
from hospital and public-health laboratories to augment the limited
supply from the federal government.
At a White House briefing Monday evening, FDA Commissioner Stephen
Hahn said he expects the U.S. to have capacity for close to one million
tests by the end of this week, from both public-health labs and private
suppliers.
“We’ve heard from multiple companies and multiple academic centers,
and we expect to have a substantial increase in the number of tests,
this week, next week and throughout the month,” he said.
Certain hospitals and health agencies around the country are working
on their own diagnostics in addition to those in development from
companies including Abbott Laboratories, Qiagen NV, Co-Diagnostics Inc.
and bioMérieux SA.
Efforts to expand testing come as the illness caused by the virus
spreads in the U.S., with new infections identified in people who hadn’t
traveled outside the country. More testing will be important to help
allocate resources to the right patients, health officials say. Some
other countries have already tested thousands of people but as of
Saturday, about 470 people had been tested in the U.S. since Jan. 21,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s website,
not including people who returned to the country on State Department-
chartered flights.
A quick expansion of testing could produce a sharp increase in the
case count in the U.S., though that wouldn’t necessarily indicate the
virus is spreading at the same rate, experts say.
“When you start giving diagnostic tests to people who never had them
before you will almost certainly see an increase in declared cases,”
said Mark Miller, chief medical officer of French diagnostic-equipment
maker bioMérieux. “Whether that’s a true increase or a detection bias,
that has to be figured out on the local level.”
Initially developers of tests for coronavirus were required to obtain
emergency FDA approval to ensure quality. The CDC test had been the
only one approved for use in the U.S.
Some CDC test kits sent to state labs didn’t function properly,
however, and many public health labs needed to wait for replacements. A
handful of states had functioning CDC tests — sometimes providing
results within hours — while others had to send their samples back to
the CDC for results, a process that could take days.
The agency has since ramped up test production and, facing pressure
to expand testing quickly, federal authorities allowed state and local
health departments to drop the part of their test kits that weren’t
working and move forward with the other components. Also, new test kits
were manufactured and distributed. All positive diagnoses from the
CDC-developed test, however, still need to be confirmed at the CDC’s lab
in Atlanta.
The Department of Health and Human Services has said it launched an
investigation into the manufacturing defect in the early CDC testing
kits.
The FDA now is allowing certified laboratories to develop and begin
using new coronavirus tests while it reviews applications for approval.
The FDA says these labs also have to follow certain guidelines aimed at
ensuring the tests are valid. The FDA has communicated with more than 70
developers and public health labs working on their own tests, the
agency says.
Most tests for coronavirus world-wide use a technique called a
real-time PCR, or polymerase chain reaction, a commonly used tool to
look for pathogens by identifying unique parts of their genetic codes
and amplifying them. The test can be used to diagnose a range of
infections including influenza, and has been adapted to identify the
genetic sequence of the new coronavirus. Specimens can be collected via
swabs of nasal or pharyngeal fluids.
The New York State Department of Health is testing coronavirus
samples and providing hospitals with instructions to replicate the test
in their own labs with the goal of providing roughly 1,000 tests a day.
Hackensack Meridian Health, which operates 17 hospitals in northern
New Jersey, began developing diagnostic assays several weeks ago, and
now plans to make them available in the coming days, said David Perlin,
chief scientific officer for Hackensack Meridian’s Center for Discovery
and Innovation.
Hackensack Meridian’s test can provide results in about two hours,
and if positive, health-care workers could start treating a patient with
supportive care while the specimen is sent to a state lab for
confirmation. The hospital system could handle tests for about 50 to 100
patients a day if needed, but that capacity could be increased, Mr.
Perlin said.
Mr. Perlin said that if the virus spreads widely, experienced local
labs will be needed — in tandem with government labs — to manage
large-scale testing.
Several companies are seeking federal regulatory approval for their coronavirus tests as well.
BioMérieux is developing two diagnostic tests for the new
coronavirus, one of which is being developed under contract with the
U.S. Department of Defense. That test delivers results for a single
specimen within an hour and can be used outside of a lab if needed, such
as at a border crossing or airport, said Mr. Miller, bioMérieux’s
medical chief. The second test can run hundreds of specimens at a time
but takes about four to five hours for results.
The company expects to make the new tests available within the next
several weeks, though regulatory approval could add to that timeline,
Mr. Miller said.
Germany’s Qiagen is adding a test for the new virus to existing
diagnostic equipment. It is being used in a handful of Chinese hospitals
and the company is seeking to expand distribution to other countries.
“We are now at the point where we need a decentralized solution that
we can use more or less anywhere,” Qiagen Chief Executive Thierry
Bernard said in an interview.
Abbott Labs plans to make a coronavirus test available on its
molecular diagnostic instruments, which are used in labs around the
world, and on tests that can be given in doctor’s offices, a spokeswoman
said.
Salt Lake City-based Co-Diagnostics Inc. and San Diego-based Mesa Biotech also are developing tests for the new coronavirus.
https://www.marketscreener.com/ABBOTT-LABORATORIES-11506/news/Hospitals-Companies-Race-to-Develop-Tests-to-Spot-Coronavirus-Linked-Illness-30101751/
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