Hi David, what about Rosche Cobas 6600/8800 high-throughput diagnostics machines? Are they using the traditional RT-qPCR assay? How can they are able to test 400k samples per week?
Roche 6600/8800 instruments are state-of-the-art automated RT-qPCR machines. We need them as well as other COVID-19 testing instruments.
That said, it is easier to ship the test kits than scale the instrumentation. Both Roche and Abbott still need to build hundreds of their instruments before the kits that they are shipping out this week can be used on the daily rate that they are trying to get to. I am not sure with Roche, but Abbott estimates the end of June to have enough machines shipped to achieve 50K per day capacity on their instruments.
Another potential problem with new instrumentation is that reimbursement for COVID-19 tests is very low ($30-$50), so it becomes financially difficult for hospitals and laboratories to buy very expensive instruments and also pay for test kits that cost $30-$50 per test, on par with reimbursement.
We try to avoid both issues by utilizing a currently unused Sanger install base and low-cost reagents.
> We try to avoid both issues by utilizing a currently unused Sanger install base and low-cost reagents.
Good thought! Thank you.
Additional question: are Sanger instruments also very sophisticated and manufactured by those limited few pharmaceutical companies/medical equipment manufacturers? Or is there a need or necessary to scale up the production for Sanger instruments too? I am asking that is because lack of testing is a global issue, not only in the U.S. Africa/India together has 2 billion people are the testing hurdles there are even more challenging.
Those systems process up to 384 or 1056 samples in ~8 hours. The proposed method should support a similar volume (even a bit higher) than the Roche 8800, but with a different large installed instrument base. So this should add a lot of capacity to that qPCR.
That said, it is easier to ship the test kits than scale the instrumentation. Both Roche and Abbott still need to build hundreds of their instruments before the kits that they are shipping out this week can be used on the daily rate that they are trying to get to. I am not sure with Roche, but Abbott estimates the end of June to have enough machines shipped to achieve 50K per day capacity on their instruments.
Another potential problem with new instrumentation is that reimbursement for COVID-19 tests is very low ($30-$50), so it becomes financially difficult for hospitals and laboratories to buy very expensive instruments and also pay for test kits that cost $30-$50 per test, on par with reimbursement.
We try to avoid both issues by utilizing a currently unused Sanger install base and low-cost reagents.