The Food and Drug Administration issued an emergency approval Tuesday
for a serological testing kit produced by Bodysphere Inc. that can
detect a positive or negative result for COVID-19 in two minutes.
Why it matters: Access to testing has improved in the U.S. thanks to
commercial labs, but the average wait time for a patient's results is
four to five days — with some reports of it taking more than a week.
These antibody tests could help people know if they are able to go
back to work, as well as aid researchers in tracking the scale and
death rate of the disease — key data for current and future pandemic
policies.
They're especially useful for determining whether
health care workers have some immunity and are at lower risk if they go
back to work.
Yes, but: The
Bodysphere two-minute test can only detect the coronavirus in people
who have had the infection for several days, meaning the test can't be
used too early on when the body hasn't produced enough antibodies.
The big picture: The FDA has been rushing to approve tests from companies that promise quicker results.
Abbott Laboratories received emergency authorization last week to
produce portable coronavirus tests, which the company indicates can
detect the virus within five minutes.