Uganda launches COVID-19 rapid test kit, eyes Africa market
Uganda on Wednesday launched a rapid COVID-19 antibody test that developers hope to market in sub-Saharan Africa, where the laboratory infrastructure needed for extensive novel coronavirus testing is thin.
The test, which requires a finger prick to draw blood, was developed by a team at Makerere, Uganda’s oldest public university, with partial funding from the French embassy.
Uganda has long experience of infectious diseases like HIV and Ebola which it has drawn on to develop diagnostics expertise.
“This is a point-of-care test that can be used within equatorial Africa village settings, remote areas where there’s no laboratory, there’s no electricity, there’s no expert,” said Misaki Wayengera, a researcher at Makerere’s Department of Pathology.
“We’ve had a history of developing rapid tests for infectious diseases...So when COVID came we were like, ‘OK, we have the skills, why don’t we do this’,” Wayengera, who also helped to invent a rapid test for Ebola.
The kits work by detecting two antibodies, immunoglobulin M (IgM) and immunoglobulin G (IgG), triggered when someone is infected with coronavirus, Wayengera told reporters before the launch at Mulago referral hospital.
Makerere partnered with local firm Astel Diagnostics Uganda, a World Health Organisation-certified manufacturer, to make an initial batch of 2,400 tests. Wayengera said they are in talks with bigger investors about larger commercial production.
The kit, which has been approved by Uganda National Drugs Authority, has an accuracy rate of 70%, he said, but researchers hope eventually to raise that to 90%.
Rapid testing is seen as key to combating COVID-19.The COVID-19 outbreak in Uganda has been effectively managed with only about 40,600 cases in total and 334 deaths.
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