Only laboratories that hold a New York State clinical laboratory permit are authorized to perform testing on specimens originating from New York. Review of laboratory-developed tests (LDT) begins after the clinical laboratory permit application has been submitted. Please refer to our Obtain a Permit[1] page. LDT review is not offered as a stand-alone service.
Application Procedures for Test Approval
The Application Procedures section describes the types of tests that require specific review and approval from the Department and provides forms and instructions for submitting test validation materials.
LDTs with at-home Collected Specimens
Guidance for laboratory developed tests that include at-home specimen collection
Access to clinical testing is an important public health tool, particularly for communicable disease. Traditionally, access to testing requires an in-person visit to a healthcare provider and/or a specimen collection site, which are potential barriers for a person who needs testing. At-home testing and at-home specimen collection may help eliminate these barriers. At-home testing allows the patient to collect the specimen, perform the test, and obtain a result. At-home testing may only be performed when the testing device is appropriately authorized for at-home, over-the-counter use by the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA). In contrast, at-home specimen collection allows the patient to collect a clinical specimen outside a clinical setting and send it to a laboratory for testing. Clinical tests that use at-home specimen collection may be offered in NYS but must meet applicable NYS requirements. This guidance document addresses only at-home specimen collection and subsequent testing by a laboratory holding a New York clinical laboratory permit in the relevant category of testing, highlighting certain clinical laboratory requirements, test ordering, business practice, and healthcare practice.
The department is aware of several at-home specimen collection models. Each includes a clinical laboratory that performs testing and a healthcare provider who orders the test and manages patient care. Certain models include a third party that coordinates interactions among the patient, provider, and laboratory. Each party must comply with applicable NYS requirements. Any of these parties may provide specimen collection kits to patients.
Clinical laboratory requirements
Clinical laboratories testing at-home collected specimens must have appropriate NYS approvals (NYS Public Health Law, Article 5, Title 5; Subpart 58-1 of 10 NYCRR). These laboratories must have a NYS clinical laboratory permit that includes the applicable category of testing and FDA or NYS approval for the test.
NYS does not review or approve at-home collection kits, though these kits may require FDA approval or clearance. Modifications to FDA or NYS approved assays solely to use an at-home specimen collection process for the same specimen type do not require NYS review or approval. However, if the modification to use an at-home specimen collection process changes the nature of the specimen (e.g., whole blood vs. dried blood spots), submission to NY is required to determine that the change in specimen type does not alter assay performance.
Test ordering
Clinical laboratories may test a specimen only at the request of a NYS-licensed physician or other person authorized by law (see Subpart 58-1 of 10NYCRR). In the context of at-home specimen collection, a patient may request a test directly from a laboratory or indirectly through a third party. However, the laboratory may not perform the test until a licensed healthcare provider acting within their scope of practice has evaluated the request and, if appropriate, issued a test order. The patient’s regular healthcare provider or a provider affiliated with the laboratory or other party may perform this function.
Business practices of laboratories and health care services purveyors
Clinical laboratories and healthcare providers must comply with business practice requirements described in NYS Public Health Law, Article 5, Title 6 and Part 34 of 10NYCRR. These requirements broadly prohibit a clinical laboratory or its agent, employee or fiduciary from providing financial incentives to a health services provider to secure referral of services to the clinical laboratory. In the context of at-home specimen collection where the patient/client initiates the request for testing from a specific laboratory using a web-based platform, this is not considered to be any incentive provided to the health services provider for authorizing the test order.
Patient care
Healthcare providers must meet certain practice requirements established by the State Education Department and the Office of Professional Medical Conduct. For example, the provider ordering the test must meet record keeping requirements for each patient, including the provider’s evaluation of the patient. The evaluation may be in person, via telehealth, or by reviewing health information provided by the patient. These record keeping requirements apply no later than the time the provider issues the test order. In addition, the provider must ensure that patients receive appropriate care based on the testing results. It is important, given that at-home specimen collection may not require an in-person visit with a healthcare provider, that patients receive appropriate care before and after testing.
Review the full Tiered Evaluation of Laboratory Developed Tests Policy, [31]
Making a Submission
If a full method validation submission is required as described above, please select the appropriate checklist for your category from the following:
If you do not see your category listed, please use the General Checklist[45]. Compile all requested documentation and index the documents as requested.
Complete the Risk Attestation Form[46] to accompany the submission. The test classification of the assay will be assigned by the Clinical Laboratory Reference System. The assigned risk classification will define the mode of review the submission will receive:
Category | Submission Required | Initial Approval | Review Required | Review Priority |
---|
High | Yes | None | Yes | High1 |
Moderate | Yes | Conditional2,3 | Yes | Medium |
Low | Yes | Full2,3 | No4 | -- |
Clinical Trial | Yes | N/A2,4 | No4 | -- |
Not Evaluated | Yes | N/A2,4 | N/A4 | -- |
1 Submissions for laboratories pending a permit or permit category are automatically assigned High Risk, except for packages that qualify for Clinical Trials or Not Evaluated status.
2 Provided the laboratory holds the appropriate permit category.
3 The Department reserves the right to withhold approval at its discretion.
4The Department reserves the right to review all applications at its discretion.
Submit all documents in both hard copy and one identical electronic copy (provided as a pdf on a CD or flash drive) to the address provided on the first page of the appropriate Submission checklist. The electronic version must follow the Digital Submission Guidelines below. NOTE: The electronic version of the Risk Assessment Form must be provided as a stand alone document.
Mark the cover page of each unit of material with the words “proprietary”, “confidential” or similar to indicate the desire to protect these documents from immediate release based on a Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) request. If so marked, the laboratory will be advised of any FOIL requests for those documents and will be provided an opportunity to block release by presenting evidence that the materials contain trade secrets.
DO NOT include additional items not requested or not needed to provide context of the assay procedure, reporting or how the analytic and clinical performance was established.
Digital Submission Guidelines
Laboratories must comply with the digital submission requirements set forth below. Laboratories are required to submit both paper and PDF electronic versions of complete validation packages. The electronic version (CD or flash drive joined securely to the hard copy) is expected to be an exact duplicate of the paper submission.
Differences between the paper and electronic copy are allowable, provided the electronic copy is more inclusive. In some cases, paper submission of certain material is not feasible (e.g., raw data and statistical analysis program data). The electronic copy must contain all the elements/data required for the submission as defined in each submission checklist, while the paper copy may include a placeholder that cross-references the location of that information in the electronic copy.
- Paper and electronic copies must be organized in the manner required in the appropriate submission checklist.
- Electronic copies must be limited to as few files as possible. NOTE:The electronic version of the Risk Assessment Form must be provided as a stand alone document.
- For PDF documents generated from a scanned copy rather than from the source document, optical character recognition (OCR) must be performed. We recognize that use of OCR may not be feasible in some cases for documents with figures and images.
- Any single PDF document cannot exceed 50 MB in size.
- Submit only one PDF document to address all the elements of the submission checklist. Raw data should be submitted in separate files, with up to five files total to be submitted. If additional files are required, please contact clepval@health.ny.gov[47].
- A project ID (PID) will be assigned to the submission by CLEP staff and this PID will be appended to the filename(s). The laboratory will be notified of the PID by email confirming receipt of the submission.
Tracking a Submission
Laboratories can track the progress of test approval submissions via the Test Approval Status link on the eCLEP home page available on the Department’s Health Commerce System (HCS). Approved methods are shared with referring laboratories, consumers, and health care providers upon request, so it is important to regularly review your list of approved methods to ensure a method is still being offered by your laboratory. Once a submission is received and logged, it is assigned a Project ID (PID) number and included in the Test Approval Status list showing the current status. If a test or test method has been discontinued, you may send an email as described below.
To inquire about a submission, you can send an email the CLEP Validation Unit[48]. Please reference your laboratory’s four-digit permanent facility identifier (PFI) and the PID number in the subject line of your email.
Responding to a Review
Many LDTs review require the submission of additional information before approval can be granted. If you receive a request for additional information, a response is required within 60 days, however extensions can be requested. Your response must be submitted in both digital and hard copy, unless otherwise instructed. Failure to respond will result in inactivation of your LDT approval request.
Deleting a Test
To delete a test considered to be an LDT from the test approval listing, email the CLEP Validation Unit[49].
Non-Permitted Laboratory Test Requests
New York State Public Health Law (Article 5, Title V, Section 574) and regulations (Subsection 58-1.10 (g) of 10NYCRR) require that all specimens obtained within New York State be tested by a laboratory that holds a New York State clinical laboratory permit, including test-specific approval when required. Explicit test-specific approval is not required for tests designated as FDA-cleared, approved or exempt. Notification to add such tests to the laboratory’s test menu is still required. Due to the rarity of many diseases, testing for all potential conditions may not be available from permit-holding laboratories or there may be adequate justification for use of a specific laboratory that does not hold a permit. In these cases, the department’s approval must be received prior to submitting a specimen collected in New York State for testing by a non-permitted laboratory or a permitted laboratory that does not hold approval for that particular test. All laboratories performing testing, however, must hold a valid CLIA number. The Clinical Laboratory Evaluation Program (CLEP) administers this process and monitors the volume and frequency of requests.