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A Colorado Ski Community Planned To Test Everyone For COVID-19. Here鈥檚 What Happened.

United Biomedical Inc. co-CEOs Mei Mei Hu and Lou Reese donated a new test from their company to enable coronavirus testing for everyone in their ski resort community of Telluride, Colorado, and the surrounding county. (HawaiiBlue/Getty Images)

In late March, residents of the Colorado town of Telluride and surrounding San Miguel County stood in line, along marked spots spaced 6 feet apart, to have their blood drawn by medical technicians wearing Tyvek suits, face shields and gloves for a new COVID-19 test.

While the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention鈥檚 tests for the virus that causes the respiratory illness have been in short supply since the outbreak began, this was a new type of test. It wasn鈥檛 to see who was sick right now. It was an antibody test that would assess who had been exposed and how widespread the virus was in the community to inform decisions about managing the outbreak.

When part-time Telluride residents and United Biomedical Inc. co-CEOs Mei Mei Hu and Lou Reese had offered to provide their company鈥檚 newly developed COVID-19 antibody tests for free to not just Telluride, but all of San Miguel County too, more than 6,000 of the county鈥檚 estimated 8,000 residents jumped at the chance.

鈥淧eople really want to be part of it,鈥 said Donna Fernald, a home health nurse who was tested the first day.

The widespread testing was an experiment in this community best known for its tony ski resort and summer music festivals. But it also served as a model for what, perhaps, could be possible everywhere to guard against the spread of the disease.

鈥淭his was a gift and an opportunity,鈥 said San Miguel County spokesperson Susan Lilly.

That was the original plan, anyway. But on Tuesday, the grand experiment with bold aspirations appeared to fall apart. Lilly put out a statement announcing that testing was being 鈥渄elayed indefinitely due to United Biomedical Inc.鈥檚 reduced ability to process the tests due to the COVID-19 pandemic.鈥 Lilly declined to comment on the decision.

The test that Hu and Reese鈥檚 company had promoted as had slowed to a virtual halt. The company had initially told the county to expect results within 48 to 72 hours after the samples arrived at the company鈥檚 New York lab. Results from tests conducted March 26 and 27 were April 1, but results from subsequent tests have still not come in.

A San Miguel County Department of Public Health and Environment press release quoted a company statement that being located in New York, where the pandemic has hit especially hard. The press release issued Tuesday said the company is aiming to resume processing the estimated 4,000 outstanding tests from the first round of testing.

But with only a fraction of the results in so far, and additional testing in question, the COVAXX testing appears to be yet another example of the chaotic response to the coronavirus crisis gone wrong.

A Different Kind Of Test

The test that Hu and Reese donated to the Telluride community is an antibody test developed by COVAXX, a newly formed subsidiary of their New York-based United Biomedical. It鈥檚 one of more than 30 commercially available tests without Food and Drug Administration approval under adopted to address the COVID-19 pandemic. So far only one antibody test has received official FDA approval 鈥 a , which uses just a pinprick of blood and produces results in about .

Antibody tests are fundamentally different than the CDC swab tests currently used to make official diagnoses. Where the swab test looks for the virus鈥檚 genetic material to determine active infections, an antibody test looks for antibodies in a person鈥檚 blood that show an immune response to the virus that causes COVID-19. Robert Garry, a virologist at Tulane University School of Medicine, said the test can鈥檛 tell whether the person is currently sick or infectious.

The plan in Telluride was for participants to be tested twice, two weeks apart, with the COVAXX test because it can take a while for someone infected to show up as positive when measuring antibodies.

The COVAXX claims its test has 100% sensitivity (that鈥檚 the test鈥檚 ability to find antibodies to the virus) and 100% specificity (a measure of how good the test is at differentiating this novel coronavirus鈥 antibodies from other antibodies).

But, Garry said, no test is perfect. And creating an antibody test for the virus being called SARS-CoV-2 is 鈥渢ricky,鈥 he said, because it needs to distinguish among several seasonal coronaviruses. Furthermore, he added, the COVAXX test is a peptide assay, which he said typically is not very sensitive.

鈥淲e know 100% is an almost impossible bar to reach,鈥 Garry said. 鈥淚t kind of raises some red flags.鈥

In an interview with KHN before the Telluride program stopped, Hu said that 鈥淚 always hesitate when I say 100%,鈥 but she said that the company validated the test against 900 samples collected before the COVID-19 outbreak, with no false positives. She added the test also correctly produced positive results from blood samples that have been verified as positive through other tests.

Theoretically, having antibodies to SARS-CoV-2 could make a person immune to the virus, but how robust this immunity is and how long it might last remain open questions. The big promise behind testing a whole community is that if one can identify people who have been infected and recovered (or never gotten sick in the first place), one can safely send them back to work or out in the community, Reese said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 absolutely my goal to make this standard for how we get the country back to a new normal,鈥 Reese had said before the test was suspended. 鈥淚f we tested everyone in the whole country and were prepared to do it twice, you would know exactly when you would be back at functioning 鈥 everybody back at work.鈥

Reese isn鈥檛 alone in his excitement. Hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman invested an undisclosed amount of through his Pershing Square Foundation, and bestselling author and XPrize founder Dr. Peter Diamandis is listed as part of the COVAXX on the company鈥檚 . Diamandis presents a fawning interview with Hu and Reese in a widely shared , which does not disclose his relationship with the company. Neither responded to requests for comment.

Testing Results

In all, about 6,000 of San Miguel residents were tested at three locations across the county, which covers about 1,300 square miles. As of Monday, only 1,631 of the tests had been processed, with eight (0.5%) of them deemed positive, 25 (1.5%) 鈥渂orderline鈥 and 1,598 (98%) negative. Borderline results indicate the person may be in the early stages of producing antibodies, Lilly said.

Yet the single tests alone can鈥檛 provide a clear picture of how many people have been exposed.

As of , a total of 11 cases in San Miguel County had been identified with standard swab tests. Officials continue to recommend that all residents practice social distancing and that those experiencing symptoms practice further isolation to prevent the potential spread of COVID-19.

One way to look at this attempt at large-scale testing is that 鈥渆verybody鈥檚 getting together and trying to do something cooperative and innovative,鈥 said George Annas, director of the center for health law, ethics and human rights at Boston University School of Public Health.

鈥淚f you wanted to be cruel, you could say this is a publicity stunt,鈥 Annas said.

The program certainly won COVAXX a lot of good publicity, along with gratitude from local residents 鈥 at least initially.

And a resort town in Wyoming is following suit. John Goettler, president of St. John鈥檚 Health Foundation in Jackson, said his organization is spending 鈥渓ess than $20,000鈥 on COVAXX tests for about 500 health professionals and first responders. Goettler said Jackson resident Dakin Sloss, a hedge fund owner listed as another member of COVAXX鈥檚 leadership team, helped secure the tests. Testing is set to begin next week, and the test will be processed at a local lab, rather than in New York.

But in Ouray County, adjacent to San Miguel County, officials decided against such testing even before the Telluride suspension.

The cost 鈥渨ould shoot a hole in my budget for at least the next two years,鈥 said Ouray County public health director Tanner Kingery.

But that wasn鈥檛 the only concern, Kingery said. It would have required a large supply of precious masks and other personal protective equipment, he said, while potentially exposing health care workers and community members to the virus.

Dr. Andrew Yeowell, an emergency room physician and Ouray County EMS medical director, also was concerned that negative tests might give people a false sense of security. If people with negative tests felt emboldened to go out in the community and interact with others, he said, it could undermine the county鈥檚 advisory to stay home.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e having symptoms or feel sick, stay home,鈥 Kingery added. 鈥淭hat guidance doesn鈥檛 really change if you have a positive test.鈥

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