“This is all extremely good news, and I love that they are expanding the validation efforts so that there won’t just be more tests, but high-quality tests,” said Gigi Gronvall, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. “Unfortunately, testing is one of those things that we can’t just leave up to the market to decide — things could change in the pandemic that make testing more or less a priority for individuals.”
Monday’s announcement is part of a broader administration effort to address the shortage of at-home rapid tests in the United States to help guide decisions about participating in school, work and other activities. American consumers have had far fewer such tests available than their counterparts in parts of Europe and Asia, which experts say would have been especially useful during the delta surge.
The rapid tests tend to be less accurate than lab-based PCR tests, but they deliver results in real time and can be administered regularly. The at-home tests are typically about 80 percent sensitive, while lab tests are about 98 percent sensitive.
Since the administration’s $1 billion announcement on Oct. 6, the FDA has heard from more test developers who have expressed interest in bringing their tests to the U.S. market, said Jeff Shuren, director of the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health.
Shuren said some manufacturers have had challenges in evaluating their tests and that the new NIH program will “take that burden off [the manufacturers’] shoulders” and help developers better understand what data the FDA needs.
“I think this, combined with the administration now putting money into purchasing large volumes of tests, is really propping up the marketplace and leading to the U.S. becoming more attractive for developers,” Shuren said in an interview. “For those making tests in large volumes but who may not have adequate evidence, there’s the opportunity potentially for that evidence to be gathered quickly through” the NIH program.
The agency also announced that it had authorized an additional test from Celltrion Diatrust, marking the 10th over-the-counter test the FDA has signed off on.
While experts have acknowledged the importance of boosting the availability of rapid tests, they say they are only useful in combination with other public health measures, such as vaccinations and indoor masking in areas with high transmission of the virus. The United Kingdom, for instance, has invested heavily in purchasing rapid at-home tests so they are easily available to consumers, but it still has a higher rate of coronavirus cases compared with the United States and other European countries. Experts say that’s probably because the nation has gone too far in relaxing some restrictions.