In the rush to deploy as many COVID-19 tests as possible, important nuances are being lost about which kinds of tests are not worth doing, causing waste and potential harm during the pandemic.
Business managers should not be pinning hopes for reopening on antibody testing of their entire workforces, and hospitals should not be doing universal testing of asymptomatic patients, according to a new report from a University of Minnesota policy center. Both would be a waste of testing capacity that could give patients bad data unless there's a specific reason for the testing, such as a local outbreak.
And right now, the report concluded, no one should use antibody testing to issue "immunity passports" because the tests can deliver inaccurate results and no one yet knows how protective antibodies are.
"We're so focused on numbers of people being tested, and we are not focusing on what the accomplishment of that testing is all about," said Michael Osterholm, director of the U's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP), which published the 13-page report this week.
The center hopes to raise awareness about the lack of a cohesive national strategy for diagnosing the pandemic. The report includes a number of cases in which testing would be appropriate within the "smart testing framework" that it advocates.
The medical technology industry has boasted about how fast COVID-19 tests have hit the market. Just six months ago, there was no such thing as a test to detect the SARS-CoV-2 virus or the antibodies the body produces to fight it, because the virus itself hadn't been detected.
As of Thursday, the Food and Drug Administration has received emergency authorization applications for 76 different diagnostic test kits to detect the virus genetically, and another 29 high-complexity diagnostic tests used in certified laboratories like the one at Mayo Clinic.
Meanwhile, more than 100 tests that look for antibodies in blood samples were available just weeks ago, though just 13 are listed as having received emergency-use authorizations today.