FDA/CDC

FDA approves congenital CMV diagnostic test


 

The Food and Drug Administration has permitted marketing of the Alethia CMV Assay Test System, a new test to be used as an aid in the diagnosis of congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) in newborns less than 21 days of age.

FDA icon

The Alethia CMV Assay Test System detects CMV DNA from a saliva swab. Results from the test should be used only in conjunction with the results of other diagnostic tests and clinical information, according to an FDA statement.

“This test for detecting the virus, when used in conjunction with the results of other diagnostic tests, may help health care providers more quickly identify the virus in newborns,” said Timothy Stenzel, PhD, director of the Office of In Vitro Diagnostics and Radiological Health in the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health.

In a prospective clinical study, 1,472 saliva samples out of 1,475 samples collected from newborns were correctly identified by the device as negative for the presence of CMV DNA. Three samples were incorrectly identified as positive when they were negative. Five collected saliva specimens were correctly identified as positive for the presence of CMV DNA.

In a testing of 34 samples of archived specimens from babies known to be infected with CMV, all of the archived specimens were correctly identified by the device as positive for the presence of CMV DNA.

The FDA reviewed the Alethia CMV Assay Test System through a regulatory pathway established for novel, low- to moderate-risk devices. Along with this authorization, the FDA is establishing criteria, called special controls, which determine the requirements for demonstrating accuracy, reliability, and effectiveness of tests intended to be used as an aid in the diagnosis of congenital CMV infection.

With this new regulatory classification, subsequent devices of the same type with the same intended use may go through the FDA’s 510(k) process, whereby devices can obtain marketing authorization by demonstrating substantial equivalence to a previously approved device.

The FDA granted marketing authorization of the Alethia CMV Assay Test System to Meridian Bioscience.

Recommended Reading

Draft guidelines advise HIV screening for most teens and adults
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA approves rifamycin for treatment of traveler’s diarrhea
MDedge Family Medicine
CDC: No medical therapy can yet be recommended for acute flaccid myelitis
MDedge Family Medicine
The powerful virus inflammatory response
MDedge Family Medicine
Temixys plus other antiretrovirals approved for HIV-1
MDedge Family Medicine
Early treatment with direct-acting antivirals linked to reduced medical costs in noncirrhotic HCV
MDedge Family Medicine
Missed HIV screening opportunities found among subsequently infected youth
MDedge Family Medicine
Hamstring tendinopathy implicated in persistent Lyme arthritis
MDedge Family Medicine
HIV prevention: Mandating insurance coverage of PrEP
MDedge Family Medicine
Acute flaccid myelitis has unique MRI features
MDedge Family Medicine