Vancouver Sun

Spartan portable COVID test approved

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

OTTAWA • Rapid COVID-19 testing devices are on the way to remote and Indigenous communitie­s where access and timely results have been hindered by distance and limited resources, officials said Monday after a new test kit was approved over the weekend.

Canada’s chief public health officer, Dr. Theresa Tam, said the hand-held DNA analyzer from Ottawa’s Spartan Bioscience will offer rapid test results for health services in rural and remote areas that otherwise must send their samples to laboratori­es in larger centres.

Dubbed the Spartan Cube and about the size of a coffee cup, results can be had in less than an hour and do not require the specialize­d expertise and equipment of a large lab.

Spartan Bioscience said the tests will be rolled out “immediatel­y” but it wasn’t clear how many were ready or where they would first be deployed.

Tam said the number of devices ready for shipment “is constantly being updated.”

“All I can say is we will get everything that this supplier will be able to provide in the coming months,” said Tam.

“The procuremen­t contract itself is: try and secure supply of the devices with 14,000 units per month in the upcoming months, and then see how that progresses in terms of the supply rate. But every day we have to re-evaluate the moving parts on this.”

In addition to the federal government, Ontario has ordered more than 900,000 testing kits, while Alberta’s contract is for 100,000 kits. Quebec said Monday it has ordered 200,000.

Spartan did not immediatel­y respond to a request for more details Monday.

The need for greater testing is widely acknowledg­ed as key to understand­ing the true scope of COVID-19 infection in Canada, and how best to deploy suppressio­n strategies. Without such control measures, experts warn health-care systems can be overwhelme­d by a surge.

CEO Paul Lem said earlier this month that production was being ramped up in anticipati­on of Health Canada approval, but he acknowledg­ed that scaling up to full capacity “is going to take some time.”

He expected to begin with weekly shipments in the “thousands,” which would escalate to 10,000.

“Then it ramps up to like 50 (thousand) and then 100,000 per week,” he said.

While remote regions will be prioritize­d for now, Lem said he could see the day when the test could be deployed at workplaces and individual households.

But while the Spartan test is rapid, it’s not meant to replace the current testing method, which involves specialize­d equipment known as PCR machines.

That’s because the PCR machines can process either 96 or 384 samples at a time depending on the size of the machine, whereas a Cube can only do one test an hour.

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