CDC没有遵守规则导致测试被污染 - 华邮最新长篇报道

l
lylo
楼主 (未名空间)

这是第一次有非第三方描述的内部细节报道, 两个月了,一个吹哨的都没有。
https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/contamination-at-cdc-lab-
delayed-rollout-of-coronavirus-tests/2020/04/18/fd7d3824-7139-11ea-aa80-
c2470c6b2034_story.html
Contamination at CDC lab delayed rollout of coronavirus tests
The failure by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to quickly
produce a test kit for detecting the novel coronavirus was triggered by a
glaring scientific breakdown at the CDC’s central laboratory complex in
Atlanta, according to scientists with knowledge of the matter and a
determination by federal regulators.

The CDC facilities that assembled the kits violated sound manufacturing
practices, resulting in contamination of one of the three test components
used in the highly sensitive detection process, the scientists said.

The cross contamination most likely occurred because chemical mixtures were assembled into the kits within a lab space that was also handling synthetic coronavirus material. The scientists also said the proximity deviated from
accepted procedures and jeopardized testing for the virus.

The Washington Post separately confirmed that Food and Drug Administration
officials concluded that the CDC violated its own laboratory standards in
making the kits. The substandard practices exposed the kits to contamination.

The troubled segment of the test was not critical to detecting the novel
coronavirus, experts said. But after the difficulty emerged, CDC officials
took more than a month to remove the unnecessary step from the kits,
exacerbating nationwide delays in testing, according to an examination of
federal documents and interviews with more than 30 present and former
federal scientists and others familiar with the events. Many of them spoke
on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment
publicly.

This account confirms for the first time the contamination’s role in
undermining the test and the CDC’s failure to meets its lab standards.

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The development and rollout of the original kits are subjects of an
investigation led by the Department of Health and Human Services, federal
officials said.

The CDC — America’s premier institution for combating the spread of
catastrophic disease — declined to make available for interviews those
involved in the test design or manufacturing. A spokesman, Benjamin N.
Haynes, provided a statement Friday that acknowledged substandard “quality control” in its manufacturing of the test kits.

Those efforts “were not sufficient in this circumstance,” the statement
said. The agency also said it has “implemented enhanced quality control to address the issue.”

The CDC said the problems with the test kits might have resulted from “a
design and/or manufacturing issue or possible contamination.”

What we know about delays in coronavirus testing

Haynes also defended the CDC’s work, saying that earlier troubles were
eventually ironed out.

“As of March 23, more than 90 state and local public health labs in 50
states, the District of Columbia, Guam, and Puerto Rico verified they are
successfully using [the] diagnostic kits,” Haynes said in the statement.

Shortcomings with the tests were first noticed in late January, after the
CDC sent an initial batch to 26 public health labs across the country.
According to those with knowledge of what unfolded, false-positive reactions emerged at 24 of the 26 labs that first tried out the kits in advance of
analyzing samples gathered from patients.

“Only two of them got it right,’’ said a senior federal scientist who
reviewed the development of the kits and internal test documentation, and
who concluded that the false positives were caused by contamination that
occurred at the CDC.

The false positives arose during testing of “negative control’’ samples
that contained highly purified water and no genetic material. That aspect of testing was essential to confirm that the test results were reliable and
not because of contamination.

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“The bottom line is, if you have a negative sample, and it’s coming up
positive, the only way for that to happen is cross contamination. . . . There is no other explanation for it,’’ the scientist said.

Experts said the kits were contaminated before they were shipped out to the state health labs.

Stephen A. Morse, a retired senior CDC microbiologist, said the
circumstances as reconstructed by The Post point to contamination as the
cause of the false positives.

“With a negative control, there’s nothing there to be amplified unless
there was some contamination present,’’ Morse said. “If your negative
control is giving you a positive reaction, that’s indication of
contamination.’’

The possibility of contamination in the CDC lab was raised by Axios in a
story in early March. “The big question: It was not immediately clear if or how possible contamination in the Atlanta lab played a role in delays or
problems with testing,” the story said.

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stories linked in the newsletter are free to access.

The CDC’s delay in changing course after the test problems has hindered
efforts to contain the novel coronavirus, which emerged in China in late
2019. It grew to a regional outbreak and, ultimately, a pandemic that has
wrought widespread death and an unprecedented shuttering of the U.S. economy. As of April 17, the virus has infected at least 695,369 Americans and
killed at least 32,454.

The failure with testing kept the public health labs from performing disease surveillance intended to predict and minimize harm before the virus became widely established in the United States. The impact has been magnified by
the nation’s inability to rapidly expand the availability of testing.

There remains no proven cure or vaccine to prevent the onset of the virus,
which scientists suspect jumped from an animal species to humans in Wuhan,
China. Until effective medical countermeasures emerge, diagnostic testing is crucial to assessing the spread of the virus and containing it.

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The FDA’s examination of the CDC’s test kit exonerated its design — but
concluded that the problem was caused by substandard manufacturing practices, according to an FDA statement. The FDA regulates the safety and
effectiveness of medical devices, including the test kits manufactured to
diagnose covid-19 disease in humans.

The “CDC did not manufacture its test consistent with its own protocol,”
the FDA told The Post.

The FDA declined to elaborate on its findings, but those with knowledge of
the matter said the problem involved contamination in the manufacturing
process.

“It’s critical that the tests used work, because false results can also
contribute to the spread of covid-19,’’ the FDA said.

In late February, after an FDA official visited the CDC’s lab complex in
Atlanta, he advised the CDC to discontinue manufacturing the kits, the
regulatory agency said. In response, the CDC turned to an outside contractor to manufacture the remaining kits it had intended to make for public health labs.

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The CDC’s performance with the test kits marks an unparalleled low in its
often-proud, 74-year history.

“I was just saddened and embarrassed when this test didn’t work out,’’
said James Le Duc, a virologist and former CDC official who now is director of the Galveston National Laboratory in Texas. “It’s really a terrible
black mark on the CDC, and the impact was devastating to the country.’’

An electron microscope image shows the spherical particles of the new
coronavirus, colorized blue, from the first U.S. case of covid-19. Antibody blood tests for the coronavirus could play a key role in deciding whether
millions of Americans can safely return to work and school.
An electron microscope image shows the spherical particles of the new
coronavirus, colorized blue, from the first U.S. case of covid-19. Antibody blood tests for the coronavirus could play a key role in deciding whether
millions of Americans can safely return to work and school. (Hannah A.
Bullock, Azaibi Tamin/CDC/AP)
"They didn't have a test that worked"
On Jan. 12, Chinese authorities made public a vital piece of medical
information: the genetic sequence of the new coronavirus that was raging in the metropolitan area of Wuhan, about 500 miles west of Shanghai.

Because of the volume of global travel, cases would almost surely emerge in the United States. The genetic sequence was what scientists at the CDC
needed to design a test kit for detecting coronavirus infections.

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At the CDC’s labs in Atlanta, scientists went to work. Officials there
assigned responsibility for designing the test kits to the CDC’s Division
of Viral Diseases, whose stated mission is to “prevent disease, disability and death.”

Those familiar with the events said the design efforts were led by Stephen
Lindstrom, an accomplished respiratory virus specialist who was a co-
inventor of seven earlier CDC tests for strains of the flu. Lindstrom, who
did not respond to a request for comment, was responsible for designing but not manufacturing the kits, scientists told The Post.

For reasons that have remained unexplained publicly, the CDC scientists
chose complexity over simplicity in the test’s design.

The test kits featured two components that focused on separate regions of
the virus’s genome, a standard approach. However, the CDC also outfitted
the kits with a third component, a pan-coronavirus segment. That addition
sought to identify a wider family of coronaviruses, of which covid-19 is the most recent strain to be observed in humans. Tests that were being
developed abroad under sponsorship from the World Health Organization did
not include this extra feature.

With the additional test component, the CDC’s scientists may have hoped to bolster the kits’ reliability in distinguishing covid-19 from other
coronavirus strains.

One of them, severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, originated in China in 2003 and killed 774 people worldwide, though none in the United States. SARS jumped from an animal species to humans, as was the case with the
coronavirus. The CDC test component also sought to detect coronaviruses that are carried by bats.

Mapping the spread of coronavirus across the U.S.

The CDC’s extra test component was not essential to detecting the novel
coronavirus and it complicated the test when speed was critical, many
experts said.

“Either the CDC didn’t know it was a crisis or they should have pulled the plug on that faster,’’ said Paul Keim, a Northern Arizona University
geneticist whose institute is testing for the virus. “They didn’t have a
test that worked.”

Officials at the CDC chose to have the test kits manufactured in-house,
instead of by an outside contractor. The CDC facilities are typically
staffed by experienced microbiologists and technicians, and the labs had
successfully made test kits for other pathogens. Producing reliable test
kits requires rigorous quality control.

The kits were developed in a specialty lab that focuses on disease research and were assembled at the CDC’s Biotechnology Core Facility Branch, located at the agency’s headquarters in Atlanta.

On Jan. 17, five days after the Chinese made public the genetic sequence,
Nancy Messonnier, director of CDC’s National Center for Immunization and
Respiratory Diseases, said in a news briefing that agency counterparts in
Japan and Thailand had already used DNA testing to detect coronavirus cases.

“We at CDC also have the ability to do that today, but we are working on a more specific diagnostic,” she added.

Messonnier apparently was referring to the extra, pan-coronavirus component that the CDC was designing into its test kit.

The tests used in Japan and Thailand had been developed by the WHO without
the third component. A growing number of countries were turning to that test without difficulties.

Messonnier also said it was likely that the virus would appear in North
America.

“It’s highly plausible that there will be at least a case in the United
States,” she said.

On Jan. 21, Messonnier announced that a few days earlier the CDC had “
finalized development” of its test and used it to confirm the first
coronavirus infection in the United States, a man in Washington state who
had traveled from the Wuhan region.

“In the coming weeks, we anticipate sharing these tests with domestic and
international partners,’’ she told reporters.

While human-to-human spread had been confirmed in China, Messonnier said, “we continue to believe the risk of this novel coronavirus to the American
public at large remains low at this time.’’

After using the test to successfully diagnose the first U.S. patient, CDC
technicians began a second phase of development — manufacturing the batch
of kits that would go to the 26 public health labs. It was during this phase that the chemical materials for the kits became contaminated, according to a scientist with knowledge of what happened.

“The first lot, they did not find any issues,” the scientist said. “They used the same [genetic] sequence for the second lot. . . . The
second lot they manufactured ended up getting cross-contaminated.”

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar speaks at a news conference in Washington on Jan. 28 about the federal government's response to the
coronavirus outbreak. Standing with Azar are, from left, CDC Director Robert Redfield, CDC official Nancy Messonnier and National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony S. Fauci.
Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar speaks at a news conference in Washington on Jan. 28 about the federal government's response to the
coronavirus outbreak. Standing with Azar are, from left, CDC Director Robert Redfield, CDC official Nancy Messonnier and National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony S. Fauci. (Patrick Semansky/AP)
In the third week of January, the CDC shipped out the kits to more than two dozen public health labs scattered across the country, from Albany, N.Y., to Richmond, Calif.

As designed, the kits required the labs to use a highly sensitive molecular technique called polymerase chain reaction, or PCR.

The testing relies on a multistep regimen that starts when a six-inch
synthetic-tipped swab is used to gather a sample of mucus from a person’s
nasal passage or throat. That sample is delivered to a lab in a sealed
container.

At the lab, nucleic acid is extracted from the sample and placed into a
small tube, along with solutions of various chemical reagents, including an enzyme that converts viral RNA, if present, into DNA.

Once the DNA is made, portions of the solution are transferred to tiny
plastic cups, containing additional reagents to help detect whether the
virus is present. The cups are placed into the PCR machine, which roughly
resembles a midsize office photocopier.

The process seeks to copy and amplify targeted regions of the coronavirus
genome. If the virus is present in the original sample, a detectable,
fluorescent dye is released.

The CDC provided most of the necessary materials for each of the kits’
original three components.

The labs were instructed by the CDC to demonstrate that the test would work before analyzing samples from patients.

But when those facilities began using the kits to analyze a negative control sample — highly purified water supplied by each lab and free of any
genetic material — the tests wrongly signaled the presence of the
coronavirus.

“It’s not the water that’s contaminated,” said the senior federal
scientist who reviewed what went wrong with the kits. “It’s one of the
reagents.’’

Microbiologist Xiugen Zhang runs a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test at
the Connecticut State Public Health Laboratory on March 2 in Rocky Hill,
Conn.
Microbiologist Xiugen Zhang runs a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test at
the Connecticut State Public Health Laboratory on March 2 in Rocky Hill,
Conn. (Jessica Hill/AP)
The precise means of contamination may not be knowable.

Scientists experienced with such lab work pointed to several possibilities, including inadequate decontamination of an enclosed area called a hood,
where technicians may have worked with the synthetic coronavirus material.
Improper handling of reusable lab devices also could contaminate the
reagents.

The synthetic, or man-made, viral material that was used reduced the chance of infecting lab workers.

The widespread false positives point to a central source of contamination — the CDC’s manufacturing and assembly of the kits, the senior scientist and others said. The problems were observed in the test’s pan-coronavirus
component.

Those familiar with what unfolded when the kits were tried out also said the contamination appeared to be at low levels.

For instance, they said, the false signals emerged only after the molecular testing had run for 34 to 36 cycles. Detection more typically occurs at 25
to 30 cycles, in which all of the test ingredients are heated, cooled and
reheated from about 160 to 204 degrees.

“On known negative samples, two out of the three [segments] were negative
as they should be, but there was a little bit of reactivity with the third
one,’’ said a supervising scientist at one of the state labs that had a
false-positive result with the pan-coronavirus segment.

This disqualified the entire test, said the scientist, who spoke on the
condition of anonymity because he had been instructed not to comment
publicly.

Even a trace of coronavirus-like material in lab spaces at the CDC where the kits were assembled could have caused the contamination, those familiar
with the matter said.

Had the kits been used to analyze patient samples: “That means when you
amplify that [sample], you have no way of distinguishing whether it’s
coming from a real covid-19 source or not,” said a longtime federal
microbiologist who spoke on the condition of anonymity to be candid. “That
’s really bad.”

Rigorous validation and record-keeping should have detected the
contamination before the CDC distributed the kits, he and other scientists
said.

The CDC’s lab standards are based on federal Clinical Laboratory
Improvement Amendments. The protocols are designed to catch errors in the
manufacturing process, build in corrective measures and ensure that
scientists keep an exhaustive record of their work.

“My question is — where was the adult supervision?” a former CDC lab
chief said. “A competent laboratory would not have that problem. I don’t
really understand how the kits got out without detecting a problem.”

The CDC's laboratory test kit for the new coronavirus.
The CDC's laboratory test kit for the new coronavirus. (CDC/AP)
A troubled and unnecessary test component
The first public hint of trouble with the test came during a Feb. 12 press
briefing in which the CDC’s Messonnier mentioned unspecified “issues”
bedeviling the public health labs. At the time, most American clinics and
hospitals remained unable to test for the coronavirus.

“Some of the states identified some inconclusive laboratory results,” said Messonnier, speaking to reporters by phone.

Messonnier suggested that the cause of the unexpected results remained
elusive. The CDC’s goal, she said, was to make sure “that the laboratory
results are correct.”

“We have multiple levels of quality control to detect issues just like this one,” she said. “We’re looking into all of these issues to understand
what went wrong, and to prevent these same things from happening in the
future.”

A reporter pressed Messonnier to elaborate.

“We think that the issue at the states can be explained by one reagent that isn’t performing as it should consistently, and that’s why we are
remanufacturing that reagent,” she said.

At the public health labs, officials struggled to figure out what was wrong. Some labs determined that the test would work without the third component. But under the CDC’s emergency instructions, health officials had to use the test as it had been designed.

As the lack of reliable testing for the virus persisted deep into February, FDA officials based in Silver Spring, Md., were unable to get a satisfactory explanation from the CDC of what was wrong with the test, according to the regulatory agency and individuals familiar with the events.

By Feb. 23, the number of Americans who were confrmed as infected by the
virus had climbed to 53, spanning six states, according to the CDC. The
World Health Organization reported 78,811 cases globally.

That weekend, Timothy Stenzel, a top FDA official for regulating diagnostic devices used for medical treatment, traveled to Atlanta to meet with the CDC’s scientists and to see firsthand the lab areas where the kits had been
developed and assembled.

According to the FDA, Stenzel for nearly a month could not determine, based on information provided by the CDC, whether the kits were failing because of a “design or manufacturing issue.’’ With demand for testing surging,
some of the state and local labs were using the original kits to analyze
samples drawn from patients, on the condition that results would be
confirmed by additional testing by the CDC.

Stenzel would evaluate whether the CDC was suited to continue making
coronavirus test kits in-house, according to interviews and written
responses from the FDA. He also would assess whether companies should be
allowed to use the CDC’s design to make and distribute higher volumes of
the test kits.

Hired in August 2018 as director of the FDA’s Office of In Vitro
Diagnostics and Radiological Health, Stenzel was trained as both a physician and a Ph.D. microbiologist/immunologist. He had founded a molecular
diagnostics lab at Duke University and, during 15 years as an industry
executive, helped develop dozens of sophisticated tests, including an FDA-
approved assay for detecting pancreatic cancer.

During his visit in Atlanta, Stenzel determined that the problems with the
coronavirus test were caused by the CDC’s manufacturing, not the design,
according to the FDA. The shortcomings with the test kits were attributable to what the FDA described as a “manufacturing issue.’’

Stenzel advised CDC officials to stop making the kits in-house.

The CDC was “expected to make a quality product’’ and was required to
comply with sound manufacturing practices, the FDA said.

Stenzel declined to be interviewed.

Anthony Tran, center, the public health laboratory director for the D.C.
Department of Forensic Sciences, walks in front of a lab dedicated to
coronavirus testing in Washington on March 30.
Anthony Tran, center, the public health laboratory director for the D.C.
Department of Forensic Sciences, walks in front of a lab dedicated to
coronavirus testing in Washington on March 30. (Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post)
In response to questions, the FDA said Stenzel “worked with CDC to
facilitate the production and quality control processing of test kits,”
made ultimately by the contractor, Iowa-based Integrated DNA Technologies.
Stenzel also worked with the CDC to “expedite test kit distribution” to
public health and commercial labs.

“The test manufactured by IDT was distributed and has encountered no issues, thus supporting the conclusion’’ that the CDC’s manufacturing had
caused the original kits to fail, the FDA said.

By this point officials at the public health labs widely viewed the extra,
pan-coronavirus component of the CDC’s test kit as unreliable. Amid those
concerns, the FDA on Feb. 26 informed the CDC by email that the labs could
begin testing samples while skipping the third component.

On Feb. 28 — 47 days after the Chinese distributed the virus’s genetic
sequence — Messonnier announced that “labs can start testing with existing CDC test kits.”

In the news briefing, Messonnier also said that the CDC had “established
that the third component . . . was the cause of the inconclusive results” and “can be excluded from testing without affecting accuracy,” she said.

Messonnier said nothing about the FDA’s recommendation that CDC stop making the test kits in-house.

“We are working as quickly as we can to get CDC test kits to state and
local public health authorities,” Messonnier said. “To date, our
strategies have been largely successful.”

That week, the CDC reported that 1,007 people had been tested nationwide.
That compared with more than 420,000 tests that had been performed worldwide.

The next day, on Feb. 29, the CDC announced the nation’s first death from
the virus, a man in his 50s in Washington state.

Citing “unfolding situations’’ in other states, a CDC news release said
that “preliminary information raises the level of concern about the
immediate threat of COVID-19 for certain communities in the United States.”

On March 2, the FDA endorsed the release of the newest kits — assembled by Integrated DNA Technologies. Still, patients and health-care providers
struggled to secure testing and have continued to wait for many days or even weeks for results.

CDC officials have been tight-lipped regarding what went wrong with the test kits.

At a March 3 news briefing, Messonnier was asked about potential
contamination.

“Contamination is one possible explanation but there are others,” she said. “And I really can’t comment on what is an ongoing investigation.”

The failure with the test kits was highlighted at a congressional hearing on March 11 that examined the government’s preparedness and response to the
virus.

“The Trump administration’s testing for the coronavirus has been severely inadequate,” said the chairman of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.). “If you don’t test people, then you
have no idea how many people are infected.”

“We don’t know where to direct resources,” she said. “We are operating
in the dark.”

A health worker handles a coronavirus swab test at a drive-through
coronavirus testing center at Lehman College in the Bronx on March 28.
A health worker handles a coronavirus swab test at a drive-through
coronavirus testing center at Lehman College in the Bronx on March 28. (John Moore/AFP/Getty Images)
In testimony, CDC Director Robert Redfield described in general terms what
may have caused the kits’ failure.

“The third control did not perform the way we wanted it to perform,” he
said, adding that the cause was either “a contamination” or an unspecified “biologic” factor that caused the test materials to malfunction.

Asked about Redfield’s testimony, the federal scientist who reviewed the
internal test data said the kits steadily amplified nucleic acid within what should have been the DNA-free negative control samples. That pattern of
amplification, he said, could only have been caused by contamination, not by any other design or manufacturing flaw.

When a committee member, Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.) asked about
contamination, Redfield said: “This is currently under an investigation at this point, and I think I’m going to leave it there.’’

Krishnamoorthi excoriated the CDC’s performance.

“When we don’t test as rapidly as we should, the virus spreads and people die,’’ he said, noting that South Korea, Italy and other nations had
tested far greater percentages of their populations.

Haynes, the CDC spokesman, said Messonnier and Redfield were not available
to comment.

The CDC’s refusal to promptly jettison the problematic first test kit
puzzled many who were seeking prompt, reliable testing.

“They just kept doubling down on what they knew was a poor performing assay, and that has really bit us in the butt,’’ said James Lawler, a physician at the University of Nebraska Medical Center who has treated covid-19
patients.

Keim, whom the FBI relied on for testing during the bureau’s investigation of the 2001 anthrax letter attacks, noted that although the additional test segment was apparently intended to help distinguish covid-19 from the other coronaviruses, it wasn’t needed: covid-19 has a distinct genetic sequence.

This made searching for the other strains superfluous.

Among the known coronaviruses, covid-19’s nearest genetic neighbor is SARS, Keim said. Although SARS and covid-19 are 85 percent identical when they
are analyzed with the amplifying powers of PCR molecular testing, that gap
is an unmistakable distinction, Keim said.

“Fifteen percent is a massive difference when it comes to PCR,” Keim said. Covid-19, because of its dissimilar genome, “is like the easiest target in the world. . . . It’s not a hard thing to develop an assay to.”
D
DreamTiger


美国CDC就是一个joke。

【 在 lylo (嘟嘟熊.叔本怪) 的大作中提到: 】
: 这是第一次有非第三方描述的内部细节报道, 两个月了,一个吹哨的都没有。

T
TravisBickle

design就有问题,那个大牛Stephen Lindstrom加了个普测冠毒的探针,增加了复杂性
,最后发现正是这个探针在生产中污染了。其实最大失败是这么重要的检测,cdc从设
计到生产都只有一个方案,还搞垄断,不让各州医院自己测,等于cdc的一个hood污染
导致全国一个多月没法测。不知道是不是搞专利赚钱走火入魔了,武大郎开店。

l
lylo

牛个几把。典型的什么新文章也发不了的老Tenure教授, 喜欢用回字四种写法来炫耀的。大家系里面这种人不会没有见到过吧。

【 在 TravisBickle (Travis) 的大作中提到: 】
: design就有问题,那个大牛Stephen Lindstrom加了个普测冠毒的探针,增加了复杂性
: ,最后发现正是这个探针在生产中污染了。其实最大失败是这么重要的检测,cdc从设
: 计到生产都只有一个方案,还搞垄断,不让各州医院自己测,等于cdc的一个hood污染
: 导致全国一个多月没法测。不知道是不是搞专利赚钱走火入魔了,武大郎开店。

h
houge

检测这块那时候肉丝儿妹是一把手啊,
如果要满门抄斩,我肯定点赞

T
TravisBickle


【 在 lylo (嘟嘟熊.叔本怪) 的大作中提到: 】
: 牛个几把。典型的什么新文章也发不了的老Tenure教授, 喜欢用回字四种写法来炫耀的
: 。大家系里面这种人不会没有见到过吧。

他呼吸传染病算经验丰富了,其实老点没关系,反正都是下面postdoc具体搞。一狗
就能发现他有不少流感的专利,要点是动机不能歪,cdc这种搞一个方案垄断测试的做
法到底是不是专利考虑要解释清楚。

l
lylo

很显然,事实面前肉丝儿妹已经从MSM宠儿 - 对Trump吹哨者,变成可能的罪魁祸首。
准备看MSM关于肉丝儿妹对Trump吹萧的报道吧。

【 在 houge (猴哥) 的大作中提到: 】
: 检测这块那时候肉丝儿妹是一把手啊,
: 如果要满门抄斩,我肯定点赞

l
lylo

扯淡,都是回字四种写法的垃圾专利。说不定这次加入一个没用的探针就是为了发专利,说不定还能靠政府订购再小发一笔。

CDC垄断这一点,确实,不能再继续。不过国会民主裆是CDC坚强后盾,已经堵住Trump
几次改革CDC的动议了,叔看好这一次CDC还是无人需要负责,CDC拨款加倍,CDC给主档捐款加倍。理由都是现成的 - 正是因为CDC研究非洲猩猩同性恋资金不足,才导致了
COVID19测试污染。

【 在 TravisBickle (Travis) 的大作中提到: 】
: 他呼吸传染病算经验丰富了,其实老点没关系,反正都是下面postdoc具体搞。一狗
: 就能发现他有不少流感的专利,要点是动机不能歪,cdc这种搞一个方案垄断测试的做
: 法到底是不是专利考虑要解释清楚。