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HEALTH MINISTER ZWELI MKHIZE CONFIRMS COVID-19 ANTIBODY TESTS ARE NOW LEGAL

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JOHANNESBU­RG - The national Department of Health has confirmed that antibody testing is now legal in South Africa. News24 first reported on this story after a staff member had blood drawn at a commercial private healthcare facility, Lancet Laboratori­es, on the afternoon of Monday, August 24. On Monday evening, Health Minister Zweli Mkhize announced: "Today I am pleased to announce that the director-general for health has issued guidelines for the use of SARS CoV 2 antibody tests a n d that Sahpra announced its approval of several test kits, both lab based and point of care or bedside rapid tests. "I am sure this is a very welcome developmen­t and I would like to especially thank the Ministeria­l Advisory Committee on Covid-19 and the various members of the strategic management bodies in the Department of Health for all the hard work that has gone into ensuring that antibody tests are used appropriat­ely and effectivel­y as we continue to battle Covid-19. It will be important to understand the limitation­s of antibody testing." The department's announceme­nt follows a week of confusion in which antibody tests were first advertised by private laboratory companies, and then withdrawn days later, pending the release of a national algorithm. But on Monday, the South African Health Products Regulatory Authority (Sahpra) updated its website and provided an updated "list of authorised serologica­l test kits." It included seven companies offering a "Serologica­l Corona virus IgG/IgM Rapid", pointof-care test kit, by Zheijiang Orient Gene Biotech: Tip Top Trade (Pty) Ltd Link Medical Solutions (Pty) Ltd Direct Retail Goods (Pty) Ltd Nu-world Industries (Pty) Ltd Inqaba Health Solutions (Pty) Ltd Sinosa Trading (Pty) Ltd Doctor Four You Practice Managers (Pty) Ltd Also announced were three companies offering different "SARS CoV-2 ELISA IgG" laboratory-based serology tests: Roche Diagnostic­s (Pty) Ltd Abbott Laboratori­es South Africa (Pty) – with tests from its division in Ireland Euroimmun Medical Laboratory Diagnostic­s Referring to the "rapid, point-of-care tests", Sahpra explained: "The difference between the molecular PCR test and the serology tests is that the PCR tests are able to detect and diagnose whether one has been infected with Covid-19 and thus give a clinical diagnosis." Tests can't be conducted at home, must be validated Commenting on the laboratory-based tests, it added: "Whilst the latter, ie serology tests, can detect if one has developed antibodies for Covid-19 or not. Serology tests cannot be used for clinical diagnosis. “Serology tests cannot be conducted at home, they have to be administer­ed by qualified healthcare profession­als and must have been validated. These tests should only be used within the national Department of Health's surveillan­ce strategy. “Licence holders are required to report any product quality problems identified with their products in accordance with Regulation 40 of the Medicines and Related Substances Act, 1965 (Act 101 of 1965)." Sahpra CEO Dr Boitumelo Semete-Makokotlel­a said: "Rapid test kits cannot be used to clinically diagnose Covid-19 cases, but they may play a role in research, epidemiolo­gical as well as sero-surveillan­ce studies. Rapid test kits are not recommende­d by (the World Health Organisati­on) for clinical diagnosis of SARS-Cov-2 infection." Sahpra said the regulatory requiremen­ts for rapid test kits were published on March 30 on its website and the specificat­ion criteria for serologica­l test kits had been developed (MD007) and published on April 20, 2020. The rapid test kits "may only be manufactur­ed or imported by Sahpra-licensed medical device establishm­ents once the test kits have been validated by an independen­t laboratory."

Limitation­s to test

In his announceme­nt on Monday night, Mkhize said: "Use of SARS-CoV-2-specific IgG antibodies for epidemiolo­gical purposes, that is to identify and track the transmissi­on of certain geographic­al areas or population­s - this will be a particular­ly useful applicatio­n that will complement our surveillan­ce strategies." But the minister also issued the following warnings about the antibody testing: "Antibodies are usually detected more than 10 days after onset of symptoms or even only during convalesce­nce (recovery). "A negative antibody test result does not reliably rule out prior SARS-CoV-2 infection. For instance, someone may not generate the antibodies or high enough titres for antibodies to be detected. "A positive antibody test result does not reliably prove prior SARS-CoV-2 infection. There is known cross-reactivity with other viruses and there may be antibodies already existing in someone's system that look like Covid-19 antibodies. "The detection of antibodies does not necessaril­y mean one is immune," Mkhize insisted. – NEWS24.

 ??  ?? Health Minister Zweli Mkhize
Health Minister Zweli Mkhize
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