News from the FDA/CDC

FDA warns about risk for false negatives from Curative COVID test


 

The Food and Drug Administration has issued a safety communication about the potential for false results from a rapid COVID-19 test from Curative, which is being used in Los Angeles and other large metropolitan areas in the United States.

The real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test was developed by Menlo Park, Calif.–based health care start-up Curative. Results are analyzed by the company’s clinical lab, KorvaLabs. The test, which is authorized for prescription use only, received emergency-use authorization from the FDA on April 16, 2020. By Nov. 9, the company had processed 6 million test results, according to the company.

The FDA alert cautions that false negative results from any COVID-19 test can lead to delays in or the lack of supportive treatment and increase the risk for viral spread.

To mitigate the risk for false negatives, the agency advises clinicians to perform the Curative test as described in the product’s Fact Sheet for Healthcare Providers. This includes limiting its use to people who have had COVID-19 symptoms for 14 days or less. “Consider retesting your patients using a different test if you suspect an inaccurate result was given recently by the Curative SARS-Cov-2 test,” the FDA alert stated. “If testing was performed more than 2 weeks ago, and there is no reason to suspect current SARS-CoV-2 infection, it is not necessary to retest.”

The alert also notes that a negative result from the Curative PCR test “does not rule out COVID-19 and should not be used as the sole basis for treatment or patient management decisions. A negative result does not exclude the possibility of COVID-19.”

According to a press release issued by Curative on Oct. 7, its PCR test is being used by the Department of Defense, as well as the states of Alaska, California, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia (Atlanta and Savannah), Illinois (Chicago), Louisiana, Texas, and Wyoming. The company also operates Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments–certified laboratories in San Dimas, Calif.; Washington, D.C.; and Pflugerville, Tex.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Recommended Reading

New pediatric cases down as U.S. tops 2 million children with COVID-19
The Hospitalist
Complete blood count scoring can predict COVID-19 severity 
The Hospitalist
Anorexia and diarrhea top list of GI symptoms in COVID-19 patients
The Hospitalist
COVID-19 vaccine rollout faces delays
The Hospitalist
NETs a possible therapeutic target for COVID-19 thrombosis?
The Hospitalist
COVID-19 mortality in hospitalized HF patients: Nearly 1 in 4
The Hospitalist
U.S. hits 20 million cases as COVID variant spreads
The Hospitalist
Experts debate wisdom of delaying second COVID-19 vaccine dose
The Hospitalist
Microvascular injury of brain, olfactory bulb seen in COVID-19
The Hospitalist
Social isolation at the time of social distancing
The Hospitalist
   Comments ()