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INDIANAPOLIS – I-U researchers are awaiting federal approval for a new coronavirus test they say is dramatically faster.
The current test for coronavirus is similar to D-N-A testing: technicians copy a sample over and over to make the genetic pattern big enough to look for the virus’s key markers. Bioinformatics professor Sarath Janga says the I-U approach is the genetic equivalent of facial recognition software: technicians are comparing samples against the virus’s entire genetic signature.
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Janga says the signature approach is not only more accurate but has more capacity. He says technicians can test dozens of samples at once instead of one at a time. Their goal is to be able to test 100 samples in eight-to-12 hours.
Janga says the test would also bring quicker results because it doesn’t have to be shipped off to a separate lab, eliminating hours or days of turnaround time.
State health commissioner Kristina Box has pointed to wider and faster testing as a key component in emerging from the three-week-old statewide lockdown and getting back to normal life.
Janga says the test is already being used within the I-U Health system, but wider use requires Food and Drug Administration approval.
Cover Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay