Abbott¡¯s new ID NOW COVID-19 test, which earned emergency use authorization (EUA) from FDA last week, was highlighted during President Donald Trump¡¯s COVID-19 taskforce press briefing on March 30. FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn spoke about the rapid approval of Abbott¡¯s point-of-care test for COVID-19.
¡°Normally these tests take months to develop,¡± Hahn noted during the briefing. ¡°I was on the phone today with the Abbott CEO who told me this is normally a 9- to 12-month approach to developing a point-of-care test. They did this in collaboration with FDA and the U.S. government in just a few weeks.¡±
MD+DI checked in with Abbott and heard from Norman Moore, PhD, scientific affairs, infectious diseases, Abbott, who said that ¡°while developing new molecular tests normally takes years, our expert teams of scientists worked around the clock to compress the timeframe down to weeks.¡±
The new COVID-19 test runs on Abbott's portable molecular-testing ID NOW platform¡ªthe unit was displayed sitting on a table during the White House briefing. The platform was introduced in 2014 and is widely used for Influenza A and B, Strep A, and RSV testing in the United States. Such molecular testing detects the presence of a virus by identifying a small section of the virus's genome, then amplifying that portion until there's enough for detection, Abbott explained on its site. A positive result can be delivered in five minutes, and a negative one in 13 minutes, the company stated.
¡°The COVID-19 test uses the same approach as our POC influenza tests,¡± Moore told MD+DI. ¡°The new ID NOW COVID-19 assays can be used on existing ID NOW equipment."
The rapid ID NOW COVID-19 test is on a rapid path to market. ¡°Our manufacturing teams are working to ramp up production to its highest levels,¡± Moore said. ¡°We will deliver 50,000 tests a day beginning April 1st.¡±
The test is Abbott¡¯s second to receive FDA¡¯s EUA for COVID-19 virus detection. The first was Abbott¡¯s RealTime SARS-CoV-2 EUA test for use on its molecular laboratory instrument, the m2000 RealTime System. Abbott expects to produce about 5 million tests for detecting the COVID-19 virus per month for the m2000 RealTime System and ID NOW platforms combined.
¡°The most innovative and safe products come from the private sector in partnership with government taking an all-hands-on-deck approach just like in this case,¡± Hahn said during the March 30 White House briefing. ¡°Abbott and FDA worked together to make sure that we had a fast, reliable, and accurate test to market.¡±