COLA Gets Nod for Genetic and Radiation Lab Accreditations
Published Date: 12/19/2025
Notice
Summary
Great news for clinical labs! Starting January 20, 2026, COLA is officially approved to check labs specializing in Clinical Cytogenetics and Radiobioassay, making sure they meet top-quality standards under federal rules. This approval lasts five years and means labs have a trusted new option for accreditation without extra costs or delays.
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 1 costs, 1 mixed.
COLA Granted 5-Year Deeming Authority
Starting January 20, 2026, COLA is approved to accredit laboratories in the specialties of Clinical Cytogenetics and Radiobioassay and has deeming authority through January 20, 2031 (a 5-year period). CMS determined COLA's accreditation requirements meet or exceed CLIA rules, including applicable sections of subparts H, I, J, K, M, Q, and R.
COLA-Accredited Labs Generally Avoid Routine State Surveys
Any laboratory accredited by COLA between January 20, 2026 and January 20, 2031 will be deemed to meet CLIA requirements for Clinical Cytogenetics and Radiobioassay and therefore generally will not be subject to routine inspections by a State survey agency during that time.
Federal Validation and Complaint Inspections Continue
COLA-accredited laboratories remain subject to Federal validation inspections on a representative sample basis and to complaint-driven inspections performed by CMS, its agents, or State survey agencies during the approval period.
COLA Approval Can Be Probationed or Revoked
CMS may rescind COLA's approval before January 20, 2031 if COLA fails to maintain CLIA-equivalent requirements or has systemic problems; CMS may impose a probationary period not to exceed 1 year. COLA will report denial, suspension, or revocation of a laboratory's accreditation to CMS within 30 days and provides an appeal process for accredited labs.
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