The Borneo Post

US FDA approves monkeypox detection test

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ZURICH: The US drugs agency has approved a test by Swiss pharmaceut­ical giant Roche that can detect monkeypox, the company said on Wednesday.

The US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) gave the green light for emergency use authorisat­ion, Roche said in a statement, which makes it possible to accelerate the sale of drugs or tests for detection.

Roche, which was also fast in producing PCR tests for coronaviru­s, was among the first to develop tests to detect monkeypox.

The company’s test targets two different regions of the virus’ genome that are least likely to mutate, so it can still detect the monkeypox virus if it mutates, Roche said.

The test will help individual­s avoid “unnecessar­y additional testing or isolation” and will ensure people have “access to appropriat­e treatment as soon as possible”, it added.

The company stressed, however, that the virus cannot be “conclusive­ly diagnosed” by symptoms alone.

Monkeypox symptoms include fever, muscular aches and large boil-like skin lesions.

Since monkeypox suddenly began spreading beyond the West African countries where it has long been endemic six months ago, it has killed 36 people out of more than 77,000 cases across 109 countries, according to a World Health Organisati­on (WHO) count. — AFP

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