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LabCorp in June began marketing to high-risk women a screening test developed by Yale University, under a law that allows a single laboratory to offer testing without FDA review. Yale researchers used OvaSure on blood samples stored from cancer patients and healthy women, and found it correctly identified cancer 95 percent of the time with few false alarms. But specialists say that doesn't prove OvaSure can detect when cancer is forming
-- just that it spotted tumors in the already diagnosed few with early-stage disease.
"We believe you are offering a high risk test that has not received adequate clinical validation and may harm the public health," the FDA warned LabCorp last month.
The FDA several years ago forced a similarly marketed ovarian test off the market. LabCorp spokesman Eric Lindblom wouldn't disclose results of a recent FDA meeting, but
he said Yale is working to validate OvaSure and "continuing to offer the test at this time."
Tracking seemingly healthy women well before they're diagnosed is the only way to prove a test finds cancer early, says Dr. Michael Birrer of the National Cancer Institute -- work just beginning.
[Associated
Press;
Lauran Neergaard covers health and medical issues for The Associated Press in Washington. Copyright 2008 The Associated
Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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