Escalate Life Sciences
FDA seeks 'right balance' as it allows immediate use of coronavirus tests

Aiming to quickly expand testing capacity for the new coronavirus, the Food and Drug Administration on Saturday said it will allow some laboratories to begin immediate use of new diagnostics before regulatory review.
Under the policy, outlined in an FDA guidance document effective immediately, labs still must submit an emergency use authorization, or EUA, request to the agency 15 business days after validating a new test.
The agency also over the weekend cleared an EUA from the New York State Department of Health, three and a half weeks after the FDA awarded the first EUA to one from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
"Since authorizing CDC's EUA, FDA has been actively working with other SARS-CoV-2 diagnostic developers to help accelerate development programs and respond to requests for in vitro diagnostic EUAs," FDA said in the guidance, referring to the technical name for the new coronavirus."However, the severity and scope of the current COVID-19 situation around the globe necessitates greater testing capacity for the virus than is currently available."