While many advocate that oversight of AI analyses of lab data be handled through CLIA, some stakeholders say that FDA should play a role.
The company received $441,437 from the foundation to miniaturize its molecular point-of-care test for HIV viral load.
The company said it will use the funds to develop its robotic phlebotomy device, including preparing for a US Food and Drug Administration de novo submission.
The company's BV Flex test measures patient immune proteins in capillary blood samples to determine whether an individual has a bacterial or viral infection.
Additionally, the agency would require non-invasive tests to be authorized by the FDA as well as a post-approval study to maintain continued coverage.
The test measures plasma amyloid beta and phosphorylated tau 217 to determine the likelihood that a person has the brain amyloid pathology characteristic of Alzheimer's disease.
The initiative now includes Foundation Medicine's FoundationOne Liquid CDx assay to test new therapy combinations in select groups of adults and children with cancer.
Beckman Coulter will use the platform to unify data across its instruments and systems to provide standardized performance metrics and AI-based analytics.
Last week, readers were most interested in a story about Dxcover's platform, which integrates infrared spectroscopy with proprietary algorithms, receiving Class C certification.
The Irvine, California-based company will now market its test to clinical labs throughout the UK for patient testing.
The system consists of a microfluidic cartridge with 640 incubation wells that allows the platform to visually test all clinically relevant antibiotics quantitatively.