A test that could help determine whether people gain immunity after a COVID-19 infection was announced Thursday by Mayo Clinic and its corporate partners.
The test is the first in the world that will be broadly commercially available to identify neutralizing antibodies — the proteins produced after COVID-19 that will fight off the coronavirus if it comes back. Existing tests developed amid the pandemic show whether people have produced any antibodies in response to the illness, but not these key proteins.
"This is more reassuring than just ... a positive [antibody test] to show you have been previously exposed to the virus," said Dr. Stephen Russell, chief executive of Vyriad, the Rochester, Minn., company that created the test and provided it to Mayo via a licensing partnership with a second company, Regeneron. "This test is showing what level of protection you actually have."
Vyriad and Mayo leaders cautioned that the test can't yet give "immunity passports," or suggest that people are no longer at risk after recovering from the illness.
Nobody knows the amount of neutralizing antibodies needed to fight off reinfection, so a test that merely finds them is insufficient to prove immunity, said Elitza Theel, director of Mayo's infectious diseases serology laboratory.
Research has shown varying antibody levels in patients who have recovered from COVID-19, including as many as 5% with no antibodies.
The test is available to Mayo clinicians and researchers now and to others in late June.
This incremental advance might frustrate those who are hungry for proof of COVID-19 immunity, but it will accelerate research to answer that question, Theel said.