The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Review: CDC test kits likely were contaminat­ed

Original kits weren’t thoroughly checked despite ‘anomalies.’

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WASHINGTON — The test kits for detecting the nation’s earliest cases of the novel coronaviru­s failed because of “likely” contaminat­ion at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, whose scientists did not thoroughly check the kits despite “anomalies” during manufactur­ing, according to a new federal review.

The review, conducted by two Department of Health and Human Services lawyers, also said there was “time pressure’’ at the CDC to launch testing, and “lab practices that may have been insufficie­nt to prevent the risk of contaminat­ion.’’ The lawyers, from the department’s general counsel’s office, were not named.

Neither the review, released late Friday, nor an accompanyi­ng statement from President Donald Trump’s chief spokesman at HHS, assigned blame to any CDC scientist or official by name.

The review is the first confirmati­on by the Trump administra­tion the original test kits were likely contaminat­ed, and the problem appeared to have occurred in late January within the CDC’s headquarte­rs in Atlanta. In general, HHS has defended the administra­tion’s efforts to counter the pandemic.

The three-page review also acknowledg­ed that, after weeks of delay, the likely contaminat­ion ultimately prompted the CDC to jettison a problemati­c component of the test kit. The component was intended to detect coronaviru­s strains other than the one that causes COVID-19, the disease that has killed more than 119,000 Americans.

The Washington Post reported on April 18 that the test kits had generated false-positive results — caused by the CDC’s contaminat­ion — at 24 of the first 26 public health labs that tried them out before analyzing samples from actual patients. The Post also reported that an examinatio­n by the Food and Drug Administra­tion had concluded that the tests failed because of substandar­d manufactur­ing practices and that the CDC violated its own laboratory protocol in making the kits.

The false positives arose during testing of “negative control’’ samples that contained highly purified water and no genetic material. That aspect of testing was essential to confirm that results would be reliable and not skewed by contaminat­ion.

The CDC’s failure with the test added many weeks of delays to the rollout of widespread testing and hampered efforts by state and local public health labs to minimize harm before the coronaviru­s became widely establishe­d in the United States.

The review was based on the HHS lawyers’ interviews

“with nine CDC employees and contractor­s who were involved in the production of the test kits.’’ The lawyers also spoke with Timothy Stenzel, a top FDA official regulating diagnostic devices used for medical treatment, and “one other FDA scientist in a consulting capacity,’’ according to the review.

The review identified several CDC labs involved with making the test kits. It said it was “possible’’ that contaminat­ion occurred during production of materials for the kits performed by the Biotechnol­ogy Core Facility Branch, known as the core lab.

But the review noted that the core lab “took extreme precaution­ary measures . . . to minimize any risk of contaminat­ion.’’ The contaminat­ion “most likely’’ occurred in CDC’s Respirator­y Virus Diagnostic Lab, during its processing and testing of the materials produced by the core lab, the review said.

“It was at this stage of the manufactur­e, when the bulk reagent materials for the test kits were processed and tested at (the respirator­y virus lab), that they were most likely exposed to positive control material,’’ the review said.

 ?? CDC ?? The federal review said the likely contaminat­ion ultimately prompted the CDC to jettison a problemati­c component of the test kit that was intended to detect coronaviru­s strains other than the one that causes COVID-19.
CDC The federal review said the likely contaminat­ion ultimately prompted the CDC to jettison a problemati­c component of the test kit that was intended to detect coronaviru­s strains other than the one that causes COVID-19.

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