Lab Matters Summer 2020 | Page 8

Microbiologist Marisa Egorov prepares a KingFisher extraction plate. Photo: Washington PHL The problems with the initial CDC test have since been well documented. With pressure building across the country to expand testing capabilities, APHL lobbied the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to allow public health laboratories to develop their own tests. to finally receive the CDC testing kit on a Friday in early February. “My staff came in on Saturday to start the validation,” recalled laboratory director Megan Crumpler, PhD, HCLD, “and I can still remember—I was at my son’s baseball practice—getting the phone call from my molecular supervisor saying, ‘Something just doesn’t look right.’” The problems with the initial CDC test have since been well documented. With pressure building across the country to expand testing capabilities, APHL lobbied the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to allow public health laboratories to develop their own tests. At the end of February, those efforts were successful and CLIA-certified laboratories were able to begin testing in-house, greatly expanding testing capabilities. Building Capacity As testing got underway, however, it quickly became clear that existing capacity was insufficient to meet the need. “Demand started to grow exponentially,” Gautom said. Washington added higher throughput equipment and stood up several teams for each step in the process, from accessioning through extraction and PCR to releasing results. From 15 specimens on their first day of testing, they quickly ramped up to 400 specimens per day. In Orange County, COVID-19 testing needs translated into an all-hands-on-deck approach, as they shifted all possible instruments to extraction and PCR and cross-trained all available staff with even slightly relevant microbiological or technical expertise. With hundreds of samples arriving each day—800 on the peak day—they hired temporary staff and expanded the laboratory’s active hours, opening early and rotating through two staggered shifts to help accommodate the testing volume. The Washington team knew from past outbreaks that data handling could pose a large stumbling block. From the earliest days of their response, they were building a specimen dashboard to facilitate data entry and result reporting for specimens coming into their lab. “The system largely eliminated the need for manual communication between the laboratory and epidemiology staff,” Gautom said. Crumpler noted that other routine testing needs dropped, with fewer people going into clinics for non-COVID-related reasons. “That worked to our advantage because our other departments were slower. I think it was our saving grace,” she said. The South Dakota Public Health Laboratory has also seen non-COVID-19 testing drop, especially for sexually transmitted diseases. The lower volume has been helpful for managing the crisis, said laboratory director Tim Southern, PhD. But he’s concerned about what these “disturbing trends” mean for the future. “We’re trying to find ways to support our provider community so that we don’t create other public health issues in the future by not providing care that our populations need,” Southern said. Many laboratories worked to build regional and statewide capacity in parallel with their own. In Washington, laboratory staff devoted significant time and effort to develop testing capacity at clinical, private, academic and veterinary laboratories throughout the state, helping laboratories obtain CLIA certification and validate their methods. The state had around 20 active testing sites by late March and more than 40 in June, bringing statewide capacity to around 25,000 to 30,000 samples a day, of which only around 1,000 are handled at the state public health laboratory. With a relatively small team of seven medical microbiologists, South Dakota prioritized enhancing a robust statewide infrastructure encompassing public and clinical laboratories, biomedical supply manufacturers, healthcare providers, tribal organizations, government agencies and other partners. Public health laboratory staff helped two of the principal healthcare systems in the state develop their own RT-PCR capabilities and assisted clinical laboratories with acquiring collection supplies. A strong partnership with Hologic helped them get an instrument to provide high throughput 6 LAB MATTERS Summer 2020 PublicHealthLabs @APHL APHL.org