Ortho Clinical Diagnostics announced the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted its total antibody assay for COVID-19 Emergency Use Authorization.
Antibody tests, also called serological tests, test if the individual
has been exposed to SARS-CoV-2, the novel coronavirus that causes
COVID-19. It does not test if the patient has the disease, but rather if
they had it and developed an immune response, which should provide
immunity against the disease, although health authorities are not
completely sure if or for how long that immunity will last.
The idea is that if people have developed immunity, they can return
to a more normal life without worry of catching the disease. The tests
can also be used to screen plasma donations for convalescent plasma
therapy, which is believed to help critically ill COVID-19 patients fend
off the virus. Wide antibody screening is considered essential for
moving the world back to some level of normalcy.
The Ortho test is the VITROS Immunodiagnostic Products
Anti-SARS-CoV-2 Total Reagent Pack and Calibrators. It is a
high-throughput, automated COVID-19 antibody test. It can be run on the
company’s laboratory analyzer, the VITROS XT 7600 Integrated System, the
VITROS 3600 Immunodiagnostic System, the VITROS 5600 Integrated System
and soon the VITROS ECi/ECiQ Immunodiagnostic Systems. These are already
in use in more than 1,000 hospitals and reference labs in the U.S.
Already, some test kits have been shipped to high-priority areas.
Ortho expects full production in a few weeks, with plans to manufacture
several million tests over the next month, with rapid expansion
afterwards.
“The COVID-19 pandemic continues to impact individuals, families, and
communities around the world,” said Chris Smith, Ortho’s chief
executive officer. “Ortho is proud to be working toward large-scale
solutions that will help people return to work, reducing the strain on
both employees and the economy as a whole. Our focus on improving
patients’ lives through diagnostics led us to rapidly develop this test,
providing one of the key resources needed for diagnosing and treating
COVID-19. We remain committed to helping laboratories deliver fast,
accurate, reliable results to healthcare professionals, patients and
researchers developing the long-term, sustainable management of this
disease.”
The test can identify both IgG and IgM antibodies. IgM typically
shows up early in the immune response, but the levels quickly drop; IgG
antibodies increase more slowly after an infection, but generally stick
around longer.
In some cases, it can take 10 to 11 days for an individual’s immune
system to attack the virus and produce the antibodies. This is why the
antibody tests aren’t used to diagnose patients with COVID-19 that have
shown symptoms within the last two or three days.
On April 3, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the
first blood test for antibodies against COVID-19. That was by Research
Triangle Park, North Carolina-based Cellex. About the same time, Mayo
Clinic developed its own antibody test and began offering it on April 6.
Stanford Medicine researchers joined the list
of organizations that have developed an antibody test, which was
launched April 6 at Stanford Health Care. It is different from an
externally developed test Stanford utilized for a prevalence study
during a community screening event.
https://www.biospace.com/article/fda-grants-ortho-s-covid-19-antibody-test-emergency-use-authorization/
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