§ 866.3510 - Rubella virus serological reagents.

Copy with citation
Copy as parenthetical citation

Identification. Rubella virus serological reagents are devices that consist of antigens and antisera used in serological tests to identify antibodies to rubella virus in serum. The identification aids in the diagnosis of rubella (German measles) or confirmation of a person's immune status from past infections or immunizations and provides epidemiological information on German measles. Newborns infected in the uterus with rubella virus may be born with multiple congenital defects (rubella syndrome).

Classification. Class II. The special controls for this device are:

National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards':

1/LA6 “Detection and Quantitation of Rubella IgG Antibody: Evaluation and Performance Criteria for Multiple Component Test Products, Speciment Handling, and Use of the Test Products in the Clinical Laboratory, October 1997,”

1/LA18 “Specifications for Immunological Testing for Infectious Diseases, December 1994,”

D13 “Agglutination Characteristics, Methodology, Limitations, and Clinical Validation, October 1993,”

EP5 “Evaluation of Precision Performance of Clinical Chemistry Devices, February 1999,” and

EP10 “Preliminary Evaluation of the Linearity of Quantitive Clinical Laboratory Methods, May 1998,”

Centers for Disease Control's:

Low Titer Rubella Standard,

Reference Panel of Well Characterized Rubella Sera, and

World Health Organization's International Rubella Standard.