EUA COVID-19 Tests to Remain on US Market After PHE Expires
The FDA has plans to ensure COVID-19 test makers won’t be left high and dry when the public health emergency ends.
On April 20, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) extended the public health emergency (PHE) another 90 days to July 15. This may or may not prove to be the final 90-day extension. But one thing we know for sure is that the PHE is approaching its end, probably by the close of the year. And when it does, almost every single COVID-19 test currently on the US market stands to lose the legal basis of its approval. Of course, the FDA recognizes this situation and has signaled that test makers won’t be left high and dry when the PHE ends.
EUA Status Is Temporary, but COVID-19 Isn’t
When the PHE began, SARS-CoV-2 was a totally unknown virus and there were no lab tests designed to detect it. As a result, the FDA authorized, and continues to authorize, SARS-CoV-2 tests on an emergency basis using its authority—under Section 564 of the Food, Drug & Cosmetics Act (FDCA)—to authorize unapproved products in the event of an emergency. Since the PHE began, more than 300 SARS-CoV-2 diagnostic products have reached the US market via the Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) pathway. Technically, EUA authorization remains valid for as long as the PHE that prompted it remains in effect. While, as National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases director Dr. Anthony Fauci recently suggested, we are through the pandemic phase, COVID-19 isn’t going to disappear from the face of the earth any time soon. As a result, the SARS-CoV-2 virus will still be around if and when the PHE ends. And that means current EUA tests will lose their approval status. While a couple of COVID-19 tests have received full FDA approval, there may not be enough of them for labs to use to diagnose COVID-19 once the PHE ends.FDA Response
One way to avoid disruption would be for makers of EUA tests to seek full approval for their products. Last December, the FDA released draft guidance encouraging manufacturers to do that, outlining a pathway for transitioning from EUA to full marketing and regulatory approval. Specifically, it recommends that manufacturers seeking full approval for their tests to include in their submissions a transition plan for dealing with products that they’ve already distributed that includes:- The estimated number of tests currently in distribution in the US;
- An explanation of how the manufacturer will dispose of products that it has already distributed if the FDA denies its application for marketing approval; and
- An explanation of how the manufacturer will deal with previously distributed products if the FDA approves the marketing submission.
Government Action to Keep EUA Tests Available
Despite the FDA guidance, to date, fewer than half a dozen COVID-19 tests have received 510(k) or de novo clearance. Accordingly, it looks like the federal government will have to take action to keep EUA tests legally on the market after the PHE ends. Under Section 564 of the FDCA, the FDA can continue issuing EUA for tests after a PHE is no longer in effect. Accordingly, tests for Zika, MERS, and Ebola have received EUA. The agency is signaling that it intends to exercise its Section 564 authority. In a recent virtual town hall meeting, Toby Lowe, associate director for regulatory programs in the FDA’s Office of In Vitro Diagnostics and Radiological Health, offered reassurances that the agency will give manufacturers at least 180 days’ notice before pulling their EUA. The agency isn’t going “to take any actions that would leave the American public without the tests that they need,” Lowe suggested. This echoes language in the December guidance suggesting that SARS-CoV-2 tests with EUA approval produced by manufacturers that don’t intend to seek full marketing approval and that have already been distributed may be used for two years after the EUA termination date, or until they expire.Takeaway
The end of the PHE won’t result in the abrupt and immediate disappearance of COVID-19 EUA tests. While the details and timetable still need to be worked out, it’s clear that the FDA will provide a transition period and that tests will remain on the market for at least six months after the PHE expires.Subscribe to view Essential
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