Santa Fe New Mexican

‘Pooled testing’ for COVID-19 holds promise, pitfalls

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON — The nation’s top health officials are banking on a new approach to dramatical­ly boost U.S. screening for the coronaviru­s: combining test samples in batches instead of running them one by one.

The potential benefits include stretching laboratory supplies, reducing costs and expanding testing to millions more Americans who may unknowingl­y be spreading the virus. Health officials think infected people who aren’t showing symptoms are largely responsibl­e for the rising number of cases across more than half of states.

“Pooling would give us the capacity to go from a half-a-million tests per day to potentiall­y 5 million individual­s tested per day,” Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House’s coronaviru­s response coordinato­r, told a recent meeting of laboratory experts.

For now, federal health regulators have not cleared any labs or test maker to use the technique. The Food and Drug Administra­tion issued guidelines for test makers in mid-June and wants each to first show that mixing samples doesn’t reduce accuracy, one of the potential downsides.

So it’s not clear when pooled testing may be available for mass screenings at schools and businesses.

The principle is simple: Instead of running each person’s test individual­ly, laboratori­es would combine parts of nasal swab samples from several people and test them together. A negative result would clear everyone in the batch. A positive result would require each sample to be individual­ly retested. Pooling works best with lab-run tests, which take hours — not the much quicker individual tests used in clinics or doctor’s offices.

The idea for pooling dates from World War II, when it was considered for quickly screening blood samples from U.S. draftees for syphilis. Since then it has been adopted to screen blood samples for HIV and hepatitis. And developing countries have used pooled samples to stretch testing supplies.

China reported using the approach as part of a recent campaign to test all 11 million residents of Wuhan, the city where the virus first emerged late last year.

“Americans think this is some new concept because ordinarily we don’t have this challenge of having to stretch testing capacity,” said Darius Lakdawalla, a health economist at the University of Southern California.

Lakdawalla and colleagues estimate that pooled testing could save schools and businesses between 50 percent and 70 percent on costs. Under their model, a group of 100 employees could be divided into 20 batches of five people. Assuming 5 percent of people carry the virus, only five pools would test positive, requiring individual testing. Ultimately, 45 tests would be needed for the pooled approach, versus 100 individual tests.

But pooling won’t always be the best option. Importantl­y, it won’t save time or resources when used in COVID-19 hot spots, such as an outbreak at a nursing home. That’s because the logistical and financial benefits of pooling only add up when a small number of pools test positive.

Experts generally recommend the technique when fewer than 10 percent of people are expected to test positive. About 7 percent of U.S. tests have been positive for the virus in the past week, according to an AP analysis, though rates vary widely from place to place. For example, pooling would not be cost-effective in Arizona, where a surge has pushed positive test results to over 22 percent.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? People line up for coronaviru­s testing at a large factory in Wuhan, China, in May. U.S. officials are hoping combining virus tests into batches, which was used in Wuhan, will boost the country’s screening of the novel coronaviru­s.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO People line up for coronaviru­s testing at a large factory in Wuhan, China, in May. U.S. officials are hoping combining virus tests into batches, which was used in Wuhan, will boost the country’s screening of the novel coronaviru­s.
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