FDA approves rapid West Nile virus
test
Wednesday, July 9, 2003
Posted: 1448 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The
Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday approved a diagnostic kit that
sharply reduces the time needed to test patients for West Nile virus.
The current West Nile test takes about two days and it can take up to
two weeks to get results because of the large number of people tested.
The new test, developed by the Australian medical diagnostics company
PANBIO, only takes hours and results are available the same day, said
Carl Stubbings, the company's senior vice president of U.S. operations.
The test detects antibodies to the West Nile virus in the blood.
Results must be confirmed by a follow-up test, said FDA spokesman
Lawrence Bachorik.
West Nile virus is a mosquito-borne disease that can cause
life-threatening illness in humans, horses and birds. It was first
detected in the United States in the fall of 1999. Last year, there was
a record 4,000 West Nile cases in the United States.
This week's announcement is timely because experts are predicting the
incidence of infection from West Nile virus will rise in North America
again this summer, largely as a result of a wet spring and higher
mosquito populations. The disease is most prevalent during mosquito
season -- from July to October.
In clinical trials, the test correctly identified the antibody up to
90 to 99 percent of West Nile virus cases, the FDA said.
It was tested in four clinical sites, using more than 1,000 patients'
blood serum, the FDA said.
The test will cost about $25, Stubbings said.
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said this week
it has confirmed one human case of West Nile virus -- in South Carolina
-- this year and found the virus in mosquitoes and animals in 28 states.
Health officials urge that people wear insect repellent while outdoors
and regularly dump water in containers, where mosquitoes breed.
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