InBios Receives FDA Clearance for its DENV Detect NS1 ELISA Test for Early Detection of Dengue Fever
InBios announces the clearance of its DENV Detect NS1 ELISA Kit - The second of its dengue diagnostics assays to receive a 510k Clearance from the FDA.
SEATTLE, Sept. 11, 2018 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- InBios announced today that it received 510k marketing clearance from the FDA for its DENV Detect NS1 ELISA. This antigen detection assay provides presumptive diagnosis of dengue virus from serum samples taken from patients within the first seven days of clinical symptoms consistent with either dengue fever or dengue hemorrhagic fever, before IgM antibodies are present. The InBios NS1 assay is highly sensitive and specific. In prospectively collected archived clinical specimens, the NS1 kit correctly identified 86.6% of patients confirmed positive for dengue NS1 antigen and 97.8% of negative confirmed patient specimens. The NS1 antigen detection kit is useful to help differentiate from other flaviviruses that may cross react with dengue antibodies but not with the antigen. In addition, InBios manufactures an FDA cleared IgM antibody detection ELISA kit (DENV Detect IgM Capture ELISA) which detects antibodies that appear later than NS1. Performing both tests in parallel can detect early or later stage suspected dengue.
Dr. Raychaudhuri, CSO of InBios, said, "With this latest product release, InBios now offers a full suite of FDA cleared assays for presumptive diagnosis of both acute and convalescent stages of dengue fever."
About Dengue Virus:
Dengue is an increasing world problem caused by one of four serotypes (DEN 1, DEN 2, DEN 3, DEN 4). Infection by one serotype only provides immunity to that particular serotype. The WHO estimates that 50-100 million infections occur annually in over 100 endemic countries. Most dengue cases in US citizens occur in Puerto Rico, the US Virgin Islands, Samoa and Guam, which are endemic to the virus. Nearly all reported cases in the continental states were acquired elsewhere by travelers or immigrants, but autochthonous dengue fever outbreaks have occurred in Brownsville, TX (2005), southern Florida (2009-2011) and Hawaii (2011).
Dengue virus is transmitted through the bite of an infected Aedes aegypti mosquito which is also responsible for transmission of other flaviviruses such as West Nile, chikungunya and Zika virus. Dengue produces flu-like symptoms that usually resolve in 1 to 2 weeks. A small number of people experience dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF), a very serious illness characterized by abnormal internal or external bleeding. Patients may experience very low blood pressure (shock) if not properly treated. DHF can be fatal, particularly in children.
About InBios International, Inc.
InBios International, Inc., is committed to providing high quality, affordable diagnostics for infectious diseases to the global marketplace. It develops and manufactures a comprehensive range of diagnostic products affecting global public health including an emergency use authorized commercial Zika IgM ELISA in the United States. Its product portfolio includes FDA cleared ELISA kits for dengue and West Nile and rapid test kits for Chagas and leishmaniasis. InBios is GMP compliant, FDA registered, USDA licensed and ISO 13485:2003 certified. For more information about InBios' product portfolio visit our website at http://www.inbios.com.
References:
https://www.cdc.gov/healthcommunication/toolstemplates/entertainmented/tips/DengueFever.html
http://www.who.int/denguecontrol/disease/en/
Bouri N, Sell TK, Franco C, Adalja AA, Henderson DA, Hynes NA. Return of Epidemic Dengue in the United States: Implications for the Public Health Practitioner. Public Health Reports. 2012;127(3):259-266.
SOURCE InBios International
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