The World Health
Organization has approved the first rapid test for Ebola in a potential
breakthrough for ending an epidemic that has killed almost 10,000 people in
West Africa, it said on Friday. The test, developed by
U.S. firm Corgenix Medical Corp, is less accurate than the standard test but is
easy to perform, does not require electricity, and can give results within 15
minutes, WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic said.
"It's a first
rapid test. It's definitely a breakthrough," he said.
Reuters reports the standard laboratory
test has a turnaround time of 12-24 hours. While the Corgenix test is not
failsafe, it could quickly identify patients who need quarantine and make it
much easier to verify rapidly any new outbreaks.
Procurement and
roll-out of the test kits will not begin immediately because the company is
still working out costing and needs a week or two more to finish administrative
procedures with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Jasarevic said.
The health charity Médecins
Sans Frontières, which has been at the forefront of the fight against Ebola,
had expressed an interest, he said.
The so-called ReEBOV
Antigen Rapid Test involves putting a drop of blood on a small paper strip and
waiting 15 minutes for a reaction in a test tube. It is able to correctly
identify about 92 percent of Ebola infected patients and 85 percent of those
not infected with the virus, the WHO said.
Knowing that margin of
error is a major help, said Robyn Meurant, from the WHO's department of
essential medicines and health products.
"The big fear has
been that the market gets flooded with tests of unknown quality, or unknown
performance, and with Ebola you need to know what are the limitations. A false
negative has enormous implications. So does a false positive," she said.
"So this is not a
perfect test but... for a rapid test, (it is) not too bad at all."
It would be especially
useful if a cluster of suspected cases flared up, she said.
"If you had five
patients with suspected symptoms and you went ahead and tested them and they
were all positive you'd have a high degree of confidence that you've got
Ebola."
Because of the margin
of error, the Corgenix test would then need to be followed up by the standard
laboratory test.
The WHO is still assessing
four or five other rapid test candidates, but Meurant said it was not possible
to say when the next approval might be.
No comments:
Post a Comment