From CNN.com -
In
a phone call last week, some of the nation's top scientists briefed White House
officials about antibody testing, according to two doctors who were on the
call.
Much
of the news wasn't very good.
Antibody
tests check to see if a person has previously been infected with Covid-19, an
indication that they've had the virus and now could be immune to it.
Dr.
Deborah Birx, the coordinator of the White House coronavirus task force, has
called such tests "critical."
The
test can help determine if someone is immune to coronavirus, "and that's
going to be important when you think about getting people back into the
workplace," according to Dr. Anthony Fauci, a member of the task force.
"The
antibody test says you were infected and if you're feeling well, you've very
likely recovered," Fauci said. "As we look forward, as we get to the
point of at least considering opening up the country as it were, it's very
important to appreciate and to understand how much that virus has penetrated
society."
Trump administration officials have promised that antibody tests are
on their way.
"We have made great progress with the antibody testing,
fantastic progress," Trump said at a media briefing April 5.
Five
days later, Vice President Mike Pence said at a media briefing that "very
soon we will have an antibody test that Americans will be able to take to
determine whether they ever had the coronavirus."
But
on the April 6 phone call, members of the National Academy of Sciences'
Standing Committee on Emerging Infectious Diseases and 21st Century Health
Threats told members of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy
there are issues with the availability and reliability of the antibody tests in
the United States right now.
"In
three words: Work in progress," said Dr. David Relman, a member of the
National Academy of Sciences committee who was on the call.
There
are several layers of issues with the antibody tests.
First,
the US Food and Drug Administration relaxed its
rules, and now companies can sell antibody tests without submitting validation
data that shows they actually work.
The
American Public Health Lab Association says that has resulted in "crappy" tests flooding the
market.
"It's
like the wild, wild West out there -- or wild East," said association CEO
Scott Becker, a reference to the fact that at least half the companies making
these tests are in China.
Becker
said that in conference call Tuesday that FDA Commissioner Dr. Stephen Hahn
said antibody tests would undergo scientific
review by the National Cancer Institute.
There
has been concern that some of the tests might confuse the coronavirus causing
the current pandemic with one of several coronaviruses that cause the common
cold.
"Lots
of tests confuse the two," Relman said.
The
tests would then end up telling people they had antibodies to the pandemic
coronavirus when they didn't, and people might think they're immune when
they're not.
A
few days after the phone call, the NAS scientists wrote a letter to the White
House frankly apprising them about the quality of antibody tests.
Results
from antibody tests "should be viewed as suspect until rigorous controls
are performed and performance characteristics described, as antibody detection
methods can vary considerably, and most so far have not described
well-standardized controls," according to the letter.
Second,
there are good tests in the midst of the bad ones, but they're not yet widely
and easily available throughout the country.
Third,
it's not entirely clear that having antibodies to Covid-19 means that you truly
have immunity and won't get the disease again.
"That's
the $64 question," said Dr. Harvey Fineberg, chairman of the NAS
committee, who was also on the phone call with the White House. "Does antibody
level equate to resistance to getting ill again?"
The
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy did not respond to requests
from CNN to describe what it learned on the April 6 call or how officials plan
to use the information the scientists gave them.
Fineberg
said he felt that the White House officials paid close attention on the call.
"That's
the brilliance of Kelvin Droegemeier, to elicit this kind of input and turn to
the academics in the first place," Fineberg said, referring to the director
of the White House policy office. "They're genuinely trying to widen their
aperture for advice, and I think so far it's working."
"To
see this kind of engagement is very heartening," Relman added. "Does
it lead to useful consequences? Does it have an impact? Does the scientific
engagement end up informing policy? For that I think we have to hope and wait
and see."
Fineberg
added that antibody tests are important on a national scale, to gauge what
proportion of the population might be immune, but also on a personal level.
"Everybody
wants to know -- am I immune? Can I now visit Grandma so that I'm not a threat
to her and she's not a threat to me?" he said. "How do we discern the
people who can now safely go out and about? That's an important personal and
social question."
CNN's
Minali Nigam, Devon Sayers and Julie In contributed to this report
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