OU Medicine, the OU Health Sciences Center and the Oklahoma Medical
Research Foundation collaborated to create a new test for COVID-19 using
technology and reagents from Fluidigm Corporation, an innovative
biotechnology tools provider. The test is intended for large-scale
testing of patients across the OU Medicine healthcare system, with the
capacity to test 180,000 samples over the next 90 days.
High-complexity laboratories like OU Medicine’s that are certified by
CLIA (Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments) are eligible to
create their own diagnostic test for COVID-19, according to new guidance
issued by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. OU Medicine has
applied for Emergency Use Authorization for the test from the FDA.
“We are grateful for the collaboration and leadership of the
researchers at OU Health Sciences Center and OMRF. This partnership with
three Oklahoma healthcare leaders and Fluidigm makes it possible for OU
Medicine to offer this unique testing capability to our state,” said
Chuck Spicer, FACHE, President and CEO of OU Medicine, Inc. “We believe
this greatly increased number of tests will serve as a turning point in
our battle against the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Readily accessible and rapid testing for COVID-19 not only expedites
treatment for patients who test positive, but it allows healthcare
providers to be routinely tested to ensure their safety and that of
everyone they encounter,” Spicer added. “Increased testing will also
allow more patients without COVID-19 to access specialty care at OU
Medicine, including surgeries, procedures and other diagnostic testing.”
The testing platform will produce results quickly – in about six
hours – which will allow physicians to promptly begin treatment on
patients who test positive, and will help public health officials gain a
more accurate picture of the spread of the virus in Oklahoma.
OMRF’s experience with Fluidigm’s microfluidics technology and its
Fluidigm Biomark™ HD system was a crucial component in the creation and
validation of the test. The FAA Civil Aerospace Medical Institute in
Oklahoma City also provided a Biomark™ HD system for use in the testing.
Microfluidics technology generates more data and uses a fraction of
limited testing reagents per sample compared with more traditional
technology.
“Solutions that offer scale and high-speed processing are critically
important in ramping up testing capabilities for COVID-19,” said OMRF
President Stephen Prescott, M.D. “We anticipate that the test will
generate several thousand test results per day, and it comes online at a
particularly critical time for COVID-19 patients in Oklahoma.”
Rapid, high-capacity testing will continue to be critical for contact
tracing – determining how many people have been exposed to an infected
person. Testing will remain fully functional for as long as patients and
the residents of Oklahoma need to be tested. That capability will help
the state determine when and how Oklahomans can begin returning to work
and their daily lives following the peak of the pandemic.
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-04/uoo-gdi042420.php
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