(just got through licking my plate er. . . having dinner)
OT: hahahaha hehe hehehe hahahahaha oh my hehehe haaha
(just got through licking my plate er. . . having dinner)
Here's my bet: I think WPI and the Blood Review HAVE validated and improved the virus culture test for XMRV. Specifically, they HAVE validated the test at MULTIPLE labs - above and beyond NCI and the Cleveland Clinic. And we won't hear this officially until the formal Blood Review announcement (whenever that is).
Do you have a link to that study?
Does introducing a Western Blot test get around any of the problems mentioned in the critiques of the testing methods?
I'm sorry but I don't see how there's a conflict of interest. If the VIP lab was a nonprofit organization giving its money to and being controlled by a for-profit company, that would be, but that is the precise opposite of the situation in question. In addition, is states clearly that the test license is non exclusive, which means any lab could purchase a license and conduct the same test.
As I see this the direction of the conflict is immaterial. According to Wiki, COI is defined as a situation where the interest of one controlling group can corrupt the motivation for an act by the other. In this case VIP is the older company, and its owners formed a non-profit that in essence sends it business. That would be fine in most cases, but in this situation the non-profit WPI gained substantial trust from patients partly on the basis of its charitable nature, without revealing the COI. Saying that there was 'support' is not the same as revealing ownership. I only mention this as a technicality, I do not know of any actual COI problems right now. But people are criticizing the IC study on this basis so it is only fair and objective to observe that the WPI situation is also potentially conflicted.
Can you give more details on how the WPI and VIP relationship Is the same as people criticizing the IC study I'm confused
My take on this is that they backing way off the PCR test. I don't know how else to read it.
Culture In/PCR Out - Oddly enough, they said that the culture test is "the only scientifically validated methodology to find XMRV" which puts into question the validity of the PCR test. In fact, the message indicates the WPI is backing away from the PCR test, heretofore, the main focus of validation efforts, stating "At this time no single PCR or whole blood assay alone has been validated as accurately detecting XMRV, and is therefore not an appropriate way to study or diagnose the presence of the virus."
This means that your PCR tests, while certainly not meaningless, are not diagnostic yet. This is quite a change. XMRV is a new bug whose genetic variation from place to place is unknown; until more is known regarding how XMRV differs from location to location its going to be impossible to create a 'validated' test for it. The DHHS in cooperation with several labs is reportedly doing the work.
parvo wrote:
Another thought I had is that perhaps they're finding the PCR is unnecessary because those who are PCR-positive are also positive by culture. Doing both tests could be redundant. Do we know anyone on the board who was positive by PCR but not by culture? It could be a money saver for patients.
<s>
OK, this is the part I find really interesting - for what WPI doesn't say, or maybe what they can't say. And since I'm a betting person, and admittedly a confessed XMRV optimist, I'll make a wager, with a promise to put up an avatar (for a week), of egg-on-face if I'm wrong. Here's the bait:
<s>
Here's my bet: I think WPI and the Blood Review HAVE validated and improved the virus culture test for XMRV. Specifically, they HAVE validated the test at MULTIPLE labs - above and beyond NCI and the Cleveland Clinic. And we won't hear this officially until the formal Blood Review announcement (whenever that is).
So... any takers for my friendly egg-on-face wager?![]()
Ok, maybe it's just because Parvo and I are both Canadians - an optimistic people, perhaps - but what Parvo says makes a whole lot of sense. I'm not sold on the multiple labs angle but maybe if I had a little poutine, I could see that, too.
I have been thinking that the most likely motivation to hurry a Weasely study would be to cover the tushies of anyone who has been denying patients medical services by "proving" that there is no XMRV in England :innocent1:
I can see no other rational explanation for running with scissors!
What am I saying! "Rational"? Silly me!
You think the owners of VIP Lab formed the WPI to send VIP business? The whole XMRV publication in Science was a ruse to send business to VIP? And this is a conflict of interest because VIP returns its profits to WPI? You have got to be kidding me. Give me a break! And what is "the IC study"?
are there tests to validate CFS other than XMRV? i am as sick as one can get and nothing has really been abnormal in my blood other than slightly elevated IL-2. my RNase L and elastase was off the charts but no doctor i have met seems to care about this. finding evidence of retroviral infection in a human being is a big thing and not a normal finding. i would think this would be taken very seriously even if other markers are not.
...the Whittemore family put their interest in VIP Dx into a trust to benefit WPI.
4. As with the prior XMRV tests, there is no real guidance for patient or physician. What does one do with the results of this test?
People who test positive can make informed decisions about donating blood or organs. They can inform their dentist who may be at risk. There are many reasons why people should know.
I think it is very odd that we (myself included at first) assume that there is no reason to know a thing unless one's doctor can do something about it. Whether medicine can fully understand it or rid us of it is not really the issue. If we are being made ill by a retrovirus and we might pass it to others, we have a right to know.
If the implications of infection are not fully understood, ok. We can understand that, we can make decisions, we're not idiots, we're just ill.