On 2016 Jul 17, David Keller commented:
Berger's erroneous remarks in paragraph 4 imply possible serious errors in the Cologuard internal assay results
Berger wrote: "Dr. Keller’s attempt to draw a correlation between the occult hemoglobin value within a Cologuard test result and the stool hemoglobin concentration thresholds for positive results in a commercially available fecal immunochemical tests with separately validated reference points is just one example of how easily the erroneous use of data can yield potentially inappropriate clinical decisions. "
Keller: Each Cologuard specimen is subjected to an assay for occult hemoglobin concentration, measured in ng/mL, a measurement which must be accurate and repeatable by other modes of testing, including "commercially available fecal immunochemical tests (FIT)". Any biochemical measurement, such as fecal hemoglobin concentration, should remain constant and not vary depending on the test used to measure it. The Cologuard composite score requires an accurate measurement of fecal hemoglobin concentration, and it does not matter how that concentration is measured, but the concentrations measured by different tests must come out the same, within the error limits of the tests, or there is a problem.
Berger wrote: "For instance, as discussed at the FDA panel review of Cologuard, due to the Cologuard test’s use of significantly more stool in the Cologuard hemoglobin tube, the cut off of 100ng/mL concentration in the hemoglobin tube collection buffer used by some fecal immunochemical tests was estimated by FDA reviewers to be likely equivalent to more than twice that level within a Cologuard test."
Keller: Your statement is completely false, and reveals a serious misunderstanding of the very simple and basic concept of concentration itself. Assuming a homogeneous specimen, the concentration of a solute (in this case hemoglobin) is independent of the sample size. The fact that the Cologuard assay uses "significantly more stool" should not affect the measured hemoglobin concentration. The amount of collection buffer solution relative to the amount of stool specimen in the test tube should not make any difference. If two different assays are measuring different fecal hemoglobin concentrations for the same homogeneous sample, then one or both assays are erroneous. Because the commercial FIT assays are calibrated and validated by the FDA, while you admit that Cologuard's internal assays are not validated or calibrated to that standard, it appears that the internal Cologuard fecal hemoglobin concentration measurement is erroneous, which, in turn, impairs the accuracy of all Cologuard screens!
Berger wrote: "Even then, the theoretically resulting comparative threshold level is merely the product of conjecture because it has not been studied for that purpose, and to our understanding, the four most commonly used fecal immunochemical tests all generate only qualitative positive or negative results without release of the underlying quantitative information".
Keller: You are wrong - commercial FIT tests yield a BINARY result of positive or negative, which is completely QUANTITATIVE and not in any way qualitative. For example, the FIT test used as the control comparator in the Multitarget clinical trial [1] was positive for fecal hemoglobin concentrations greater than or equal to 100 ng/mL, and negative for lesser concentrations. The results of that FIT test were binary (positive or negative), quantitative, accurate, repeatable and did not vary with the size of the stool specimen! The results of the Cologuard internal fecal hemoglobin concentration assay had better agree with the FIT test results, or there is a serious problem, and it is probably in your assay (see my rebuttal of your second paragraph for a full explanation of why).
Reference
Imperiale, T.F., Ransohoff, D.F., Itzkowitz, S.H., Turnbull, B.A., Ross, M.E. Colorectal Cancer Study Group. Fecal DNA versus fecal occult blood for colorectal cancer screening in an average risk population. N Engl J Med. 2004 Dec 23;351 (270414. PubMed PMID: 15616205).
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