Important to note that the MHRA see these tests as for detecting “Current Infection”. That is detecting active infection, but is bigger than checking whether people are infectious. It also includes people who are pre-infectious.
2/12
They give guidance on reference standards to detect this. There are challenges here in establishing scientifically valid clinical reference standards. RT-PCR is regarded as acceptable which is what most are using.
3/12
Document gives “desirable” and “acceptable” performance levels, and separates out roles of the tests for RED LIGHT and GREEN LIGHT purposes, as they require different performance levels.
This all makes good sense.
So how well do they say these tests need to work?
4/12
Sensitivity needs to be >=80% for red light tests and 97% for green light tests, or even better.
5/12
Minimum sample size 150 cases, and evaluating the test in the intended use population.
Emphasises importance of empirical evaluation of strategies of tests, not just evaluating them in models.
Echoes many comments made by @RoyalStatSoc in report.
Notably these values are not reached by Innova – data are only available on 80 asymptomatic cases from Liverpool and Birmingham, with a much lower sensitivity and no data on self-testing.
7/12
Specificity requirements same for both uses, 99.5% acceptable 99.9% desirable. No problem for Innova on this one.
8/12
The guidance is very clear on the importance of strong study designs following the recommendations here. bmj.com/content/372/bm…
Great to see the regulator championing the importance of real world studies over analytical laboratory evaluations.
9/12
Interestingly that this means MHRA do not regard the laboratory based studies planned by the Test Valdiation Group as acceptable evidence.
There are some troubling disconnects between TVG and MHRA in these docs. TVG seems out of step.
They do acknowledge that more rapid study designs can be used in a pandemic, but insist on immediate commencement of methodological strong evaluations most-marketing
This is all very welcome
11/12
This seems well thought through and justified (there's lots of maths at the back) to explicitly stating the evidence and performance levels we need.
It may be some while before tests are available at these standards,
What do we known about ORIENT GENE used in the Daily Contact Testing Trial by the @educationgovuk and @DHSCgovuk?
There have been claims that this test is as good as others and has been reviewed by @MHRAgovuk for use in assisted testing. This is not right
1/10
The process does not make sense.
The MHRA never review products for assisted testing as they are professional use tests, which go through the self-certification process to get a CE-IVD mark.
MHRA doesn't go near this process.
2/n
In fact ORIENT GENE is not even on the MHRA register of products which is a requirement. You can check here - both for the product and manufacturer (sorry for the messy link).
The 1st 2 weeks of school testing did find MORE FALSE POSITIVES than TRUE POSITIVES - data are finally public.
Proportion false were 62% and 55% in these 2 weeks. Of 2304 positive tests, 1353 were likely false, with 1 positive per 6900 tests done.
Remember that the law made kids, teachers, families and bubbles had to isolate for 10 days even when the PCR came back negative, despite the @RoyalStatSoc spending days trying to explain the issues to @DHSCgovuk.
Never ever say tests don't do harm.
To be clear as some still can't see the problem. 2 weeks testing in every school only found 954 true cases. To find each one used 6884 tests (cost £144,564) and 1.4 false negatives were put into unnecessary isolation with bubble and family- 500 person days if a bubble affected 36
Well here is some real data from 27 health care workers who picked up symptomatic Covid-19 infections whilst being tested twice weekly using RT-PCR. The paper develops models to look at impact of testing frequency, but also hypotheses on LFT performance bmcmedicine.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.11…
There is excellent presentation of the original data in the paper, as well as results from the models. Kudos to the authors.
Plots of Ct values from PCR are provided, which show that RT-PCR with Ct<37 had a peak sensitivity for detecting infection of 77% 4 days after infection.
No LFTs were used in the study, but the paper considered test results with Ct<28 and Ct<25 as illustrations of how LFTs might perform. At Ct<28 the red spots are +ve LFT results, the black are -ve LFT results, peak sensitivity is 64% at 4.3 days post infection.
Ben Dyson, an executive director of strategy at the health department and one of Matt Hancock’s advisers, stressed the “fairly urgent need for decisions” on “the point at which we stop offering asymptomatic testing”.
“As of today, someone who gets a positive LFD result in (say) London has at best a 25% chance of it being a true positive, but if it is a self-reported test potentially as low as 10% (on an optimistic assumption about specificity) or as low as 2% (on a more pessimistic assumption
Take note - @dhscgov rapid tests are being sent out (certainly in schools) with two different (and conflicting) information sheets, one in the box and one given out separately.
(the crumpled one with the picture is in the box, the glossy one is handed out separately).
1/10
The clue to which one is most up to date is on the back page (the one in the box is the out of date version).
2/10
The important difference in on page 2, which has far more info in the box (1st) version than the version given out about who should use the test and what they should do.