Hindustan Times (Delhi)

India tests 10mn samples, experts say more required

- Rhythma Kaul letters@hindustant­imes.com

nNEWDELHI: India has tested 10 million samples for the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) in the past fiveand-a-half months, with at least 200,000 samples being tested between January 22 and July 5 on average daily in the 1,100 laboratori­es that were identified, upgraded or establishe­d across the country at a breakneck speed to ramp up testing and prevent the spread of infections.

Covid-19 testing labs in the country approved by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) are capable of performing about 350,000 tests a day currently, an increase from about 10,000 tests per day in early February. ICMR has been reiteratin­g how developing an intelligen­t testing strategy helped India stay ahead of the Sars-cov2 virus that causes Covid-19.

From 13 labs in the first week of February to 123 labs on March 24, India now has 1,100 testing labs in all states, and the numbers are only growing as ICMR continues to expand the testing laboratory network. Of the approved laboratori­es, 786 labs are in the government sector and 314 are private testing facilities.

ICMR has also collaborat­ed with other science and research agencies such as the department of science and technology, department of biotechnol­ogy, Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, Defence Research and Developmen­t Organisati­on and the Department of Atomic Energy for use of their testing labs and developing research solutions.

Amitabh Kant, CEO of the government policy think tank Niti Aayog, emphasized the need for aggressive testing.

“…We can succeed against #Covid-19 only with 3T strategy of testing, tracing and treating. This is the moment to act, and to act fast,” Kant tweeted. Kant chairs the empowered group number 6 on coordinati­ng with private sector, NGOS, and Internatio­nal Organisati­ons for Covid19-related response.

Experts also say that testing is crucial to determine the coronaviru­s disease burden.

“Unless you test you cannot know the actual disease prevalence. Targeted approach is about being able to know the disease burden as exactly as possible, and we now have the expertise and technology at our disposal to break things down to the lowest level. Looking for syndromic cases or guessing cases on the basis of clinical assessment doesn’t make sense in today’s day and age when science has advanced significan­tly. We have the resources and it is a good idea to make use of them,” said Dr Lalit Kant, former head of the division of epidemiolo­gy, ICMR.

The national testing strategy is being constantly revised in line with the current trend of the outbreak.

Reverse transcript­ase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) is the gold standard testing method for the Sars- COV-2 diagnosis and is in place in all the identified laboratori­es for diagnosing the disease, says ICMR. To ramp up testing, ICMR has also been exploring other testing mechanisms for diagnosis along with RT-PCR testing.

“Testing remains a cornerston­e in our fight against Covid-19 and therefore ramping up testing is essentiall­y critical to track, trace and treat all cases of Covid-19,” said the director general of ICMR, Dr Balram Bhargava, in one of its letters to the Union health secretary, Preeti Sudan, last month.

On June 15, ICMR validated first point of care rapid antigen test for Covid-19 diagnosis that states can deploy on the field in containmen­t zones, hotspots and hospitals, and get results in a maximum 30 minutes as opposed to five hours in a convention­al RT-PCR test.

This is the first such rapid test in the world that can be used for diagnosis as positive cases need not be confirmed through an RT-PCR test.

An antigen is a foreign molecule that induces an immune response in the body, especially the production of antibodies, and detecting its presence determines a present infection.

Apart from antigen testing, ICMR also included antibodyba­sed (blood) tests for sero-surveillan­ce. “However, antibody tests are not suitable to diagnose live Covid-19 infections,” advises the ICMR.

ICMR has developed guidelines ranging from the preparatio­n of a network of government and private laboratori­es to ensure efficient validation and evaluation of new diagnostic kits.

Experts say India would need to test more as not even 1% of the country’s total population has currently been tested.

“It is important to test more because you cannot devise strategies for the remaining 99% of the population by looking at statistics coming from just 1% of the country’s population,” says Dr T Jacob John, former virology head at the Christian Medical College, Vellore.

 ?? SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO ?? From 13 labs in the first week of February to 123 on March 24, India n now has 1,100 testing labs in all states.
SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO From 13 labs in the first week of February to 123 on March 24, India n now has 1,100 testing labs in all states.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India