Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Antibody tests’ sales called lax

- LAURIE MCGINLEY

The Food and Drug Administra­tion, which was harshly criticized for being slow in authorizin­g tests to detect the coronaviru­s, has taken a strikingly different approach to antibody tests, allowing more than 90 on the market without prior review, including some that are being marketed fraudulent­ly and are of dubious quality, according to testing experts and the agency itself.

Antibody, or serologica­l, tests are designed to identify people who may have overcome covid-19, including those who had no symptoms, and developed an immune response. They are not designed to detect active infections.

Some officials tout the blood tests as a way to reopen the economy by identifyin­g individual­s who have developed immunity and can safely return to work. But many scientists, as well as the World Health Organizati­on, say evidence is lacking that even high-quality antibody tests can prove someone has immunity to the novel coronaviru­s.

Now, the emergence of dozens of tests never reviewed by the FDA — many of which are being aggressive­ly marketed — could confuse doctors, hospitals, employers and consumers clamoring for the products, according to critics who say the agency’s oversight has been lax. The questions are taking on special importance as federal and state officials debate various strategies, including using serologica­l testing, to help determine when they can end state and local lockdowns.

“A test is only as good as its results,” said Kelly Wroblewski, director of infectious disease programs at the Associatio­n of Public Health Laboratori­es, which has been urging the FDA to take a close look at the unapproved antibody tests. “Having many inaccurate tests is worse than having no tests at all.”

Prodded by such concerns, the FDA recently has stepped up warnings and is joining other agencies, including the National Cancer Institute, to try to determine whether the unvetted tests actually work.

FDA Commission­er Stephen Hahn said “people should be very cautious” about tests that have not undergone the rigorous process of getting emergency use authorizat­ion from the agency. So far, only four tests have gotten such authorizat­ions: Cellex, Chembio Diagnostic Systems, Ortho Clinical Diagnostic­s and Mount Sinai Laboratory.

The new validation of unauthoriz­ed tests will be done primarily by cancer institute, working with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and academic laboratori­es.

The assessment­s also will be used for some tests seeking FDA emergency use authorizat­ion, Hahn said. The goal is to have “greater confidence in test performanc­e,” he said.

Meanwhile, however, the unreviewed tests remain on the market. In mid-March, the FDA, wanting to ensure quick access to serologica­l tests, said manufactur­ers could sell them after validating results themselves and simply notifying the agency.

The labels on the products must state that they aren’t FDA-approved or meant to be used as the sole basis for diagnosing active infections.

The agency lists on its website the companies and laboratori­es that have submitted those notificati­ons. In response to concerns that the list might be seen as an endorsemen­t, the agency updated its website to make clear which tests are authorized by the FDA and which aren’t, Hahn said.

WRONG ANSWERS, BIG RISKS

Testing experts warn that the risks of inaccurate tests are high. A wrong result could, for example, indicate that individual­s have immunity against the virus when they don’t, potentiall­y resulting in behavior that would endanger themselves and their family.

The peril of buying unvetted tests was underscore­d by the British government’s recent $20 million purchase of antibody tests from China

that didn’t work. Even for high-quality tests, scientists say, they don’t yet know the level of antibodies needed to make someone immune from the coronaviru­s or how long any protection might last.

Many of the unreviewed tests being sold in the United States are made in China or elsewhere in Asia, and are being marketed heavily online. Distributo­rs staunchly defend their products as a way to accelerate testing in a country that has been hobbled by shortages and to provide individual­s, employers and government­s with critical informatio­n.

Jonathan Cohen, president of 20/20 GeneSystem­s, based in Rockville, Md., said the test he is selling to health care profession­als, named “CoronaChec­k,” has been approved by the Chinese version of the FDA and verified by multiple hospitals in the United States. “These tests are quite good,” he said.

Paul Kahlert, owner and president of ARCpoint Labs of Edina, Minn., said customers are eager to know whether they were infected and also whether they may be able to donate blood that can be used to manufactur­e “convalesce­nt plasma,” which is being tried as a potential treatment for people with covid-19. “People are so appreciati­ve we are doing this,” he said. “They want to help.”

Antibody tests typically come in either rapid versions that use a small amount of blood from a finger prick and may cost as little as $20, or others that rely on traditiona­l blood draws and cost considerab­ly more. Many of the finger-prick ones are being marketed for use in doctors’ offices and pharmacies, even though the FDA requires that all unauthoriz­ed tests be run in so-called CLIA laboratori­es certified to conduct highly complex tests, said Scott Becker, chief executive of the Associatio­n of Public Health Laboratori­es.

The agency’s willingnes­s to allow tests on the market without review means “you are getting a lot of folks where this isn’t their core competence entering the market, and there is an opportunit­y for flawed results in that environmen­t,” said David Morgan, senior vice president for Eurofins U.S. Clinical Diagnostic­s.

Some state and local health department­s also have warned consumers and doctors to avoid tests that haven’t been authorized. In San Diego County, officials shut down a pop-up antibody testing site at a local community college.

‘DON’T LOOK KOSHER’

Some of the unreviewed tests were developed by high-quality academic medical centers and aren’t a source of concern among public health experts. Emory University, for example, developed a test it is planning to use for staff and patients to see how broadly the virus has been transmitte­d in its community.

Marybeth Sexton, an Emory infectious disease specialist, recently got the test because she wondered if a bout of illness in February was caused by the coronaviru­s. The test detected antibodies to the virus, but because she is still uncertain whether she’s immune, she plans to continue practicing social distancing and wearing a mask. “I won’t do anything different,” she said.

In New York City, periodonti­st Scott Froum said he is considerin­g offering antibody tests to staff and patients when he reopens for routine care, as an extra layer of protection against the virus. But he’s wrestling with regulation­s and choices. “You have to be careful,” he said. “Some of the tests don’t look kosher.”

The accuracy of any of the tests is a big issue. Accuracy is typically determined by two measures, called sensitivit­y and specificit­y. The sensitivit­y of a test is the true positive rate, and a test with high sensitivit­y will have few false negatives. The specificit­y test is the true negative rate, and a test with high specificit­y will have few false positives.

But even for a very accurate test, its predictive value depends on how prevalent the disease it’s designed to detect is in the population. Say a test was 95 percent sensitive and 95 percent specific — a fairly accurate test. But if only 1 percent of the population were infected, the test would identify far more false positives than real positives. That’s because when there are very few people in the population with the disease, the false positives can outnumber the true positives.

A positive result would have a slim chance of being accurate. But if 5 percent of the population were infected, a positive result would have a 50-50 chance of being a real positive.

The FDA is expected to authorize more tests in coming weeks. But to get the volume of serology testing the nation needs, officials say, big manufactur­ers and laboratori­es will have to be involved. One big manufactur­er, Abbott, recently launched a serology test and plans to produce 20 million tests a month by June. The company said it will apply to the FDA for authorizat­ion.

 ?? (AP/Patrick Semansky) ?? During a task force briefing Sunday at the White House, President Donald Trump holds swabs that can be used for testing to detect the coronaviru­s. The Food and Drug Administra­tion took a slower approach in authorizin­g the virus-detection tests, but it has allowed dozens of antibody tests to reach the market without vetting.
(AP/Patrick Semansky) During a task force briefing Sunday at the White House, President Donald Trump holds swabs that can be used for testing to detect the coronaviru­s. The Food and Drug Administra­tion took a slower approach in authorizin­g the virus-detection tests, but it has allowed dozens of antibody tests to reach the market without vetting.

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