Cargando…

Evaluation of the Nigeria national HIV rapid testing algorithm

Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) diagnosis remains the gateway to HIV care and treatment. However, due to changes in HIV prevalence and testing coverage across different geopolitical zones, it is crucial to evaluate the national HIV testing algorithm as false positivity due to low prevalence could...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Iriemenam, Nnaemeka C., Mpamugo, Augustine, Ikpeazu, Akudo, Okunoye, Olumide O., Onokevbagbe, Edewede, Bassey, Orji O., Tapdiyel, Jelpe, Alagi, Matthias A., Meribe, Chidozie, Ahmed, Mukhtar L., Ikwulono, Gabriel, Aguolu, Rose, Ashefor, Gregory, Nzelu, Charles, Ehoche, Akipu, Ezra, Babatunde, Obioha, Christine, Baffa Sule, Ibrahim, Adedokun, Oluwasanmi, Mba, Nwando, Ihekweazu, Chikwe, Charurat, Manhattan, Lindsay, Brianna, Stafford, Kristen A., Ibrahim, Dalhatu, Swaminathan, Mahesh, Yufenyuy, Ernest L., Parekh, Bharat S., Adebajo, Sylvia, Abimiku, Alash’le, Okoye, McPaul I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10021713/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36962660
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001077
_version_ 1784908560951410688
author Iriemenam, Nnaemeka C.
Mpamugo, Augustine
Ikpeazu, Akudo
Okunoye, Olumide O.
Onokevbagbe, Edewede
Bassey, Orji O.
Tapdiyel, Jelpe
Alagi, Matthias A.
Meribe, Chidozie
Ahmed, Mukhtar L.
Ikwulono, Gabriel
Aguolu, Rose
Ashefor, Gregory
Nzelu, Charles
Ehoche, Akipu
Ezra, Babatunde
Obioha, Christine
Baffa Sule, Ibrahim
Adedokun, Oluwasanmi
Mba, Nwando
Ihekweazu, Chikwe
Charurat, Manhattan
Lindsay, Brianna
Stafford, Kristen A.
Ibrahim, Dalhatu
Swaminathan, Mahesh
Yufenyuy, Ernest L.
Parekh, Bharat S.
Adebajo, Sylvia
Abimiku, Alash’le
Okoye, McPaul I.
author_facet Iriemenam, Nnaemeka C.
Mpamugo, Augustine
Ikpeazu, Akudo
Okunoye, Olumide O.
Onokevbagbe, Edewede
Bassey, Orji O.
Tapdiyel, Jelpe
Alagi, Matthias A.
Meribe, Chidozie
Ahmed, Mukhtar L.
Ikwulono, Gabriel
Aguolu, Rose
Ashefor, Gregory
Nzelu, Charles
Ehoche, Akipu
Ezra, Babatunde
Obioha, Christine
Baffa Sule, Ibrahim
Adedokun, Oluwasanmi
Mba, Nwando
Ihekweazu, Chikwe
Charurat, Manhattan
Lindsay, Brianna
Stafford, Kristen A.
Ibrahim, Dalhatu
Swaminathan, Mahesh
Yufenyuy, Ernest L.
Parekh, Bharat S.
Adebajo, Sylvia
Abimiku, Alash’le
Okoye, McPaul I.
author_sort Iriemenam, Nnaemeka C.
collection PubMed
description Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) diagnosis remains the gateway to HIV care and treatment. However, due to changes in HIV prevalence and testing coverage across different geopolitical zones, it is crucial to evaluate the national HIV testing algorithm as false positivity due to low prevalence could be detrimental to both the client and the service delivery. Therefore, we evaluated the performance of the national HIV rapid testing algorithm using specimens collected from multiple HIV testing services (HTS) sites and compared the results from different HIV prevalence levels across the six geopolitical zones of Nigeria. The evaluation employed a dual approach, retrospective, and prospective. The retrospective evaluation focused on a desktop review of program data (n = 492,880) collated from patients attending routine HTS from six geopolitical zones of Nigeria between January 2017 and December 2019. The prospective component utilized samples (n = 2,895) collected from the field at the HTS and tested using the current national serial HIV rapid testing algorithm. These samples were transported to the National Reference Laboratory (NRL), Abuja, and were re-tested using the national HIV rapid testing algorithm and HIV-1/2 supplementary assays (Geenius to confirm positives and resolve discordance and multiplex assay). The retrospective component of the study revealed that the overall proportion of HIV positives, based on the selected areas, was 5.7% (28,319/492,880) within the study period, and the discordant rate between tests 1 and 2 was 1.1%. The prospective component of the study indicated no significant differences between the test performed at the field using the national HIV rapid testing algorithm and the re-testing performed at the NRL. The comparison between the test performed at the field using the national HIV rapid testing algorithm and Geenius HIV-1/2 supplementary assay showed an agreement rate of 95.2%, while that of the NRL was 99.3%. In addition, the comparison of the field results with HIV multiplex assay indicated a sensitivity of 96.6%, the specificity of 98.2%, PPV of 97.0%, and Kappa Statistic of 0.95, and that of the NRL with HIV multiplex assay was 99.2%, 99.4%, 99.0%, and 0.99, respectively. Results show that the Nigeria national serial HIV rapid testing algorithm performed very well across the target settings. However, the algorithm’s performance in the field was lower than the performance outcomes under a controlled environment in the NRL. There is a need to target testers in the field for routine continuous quality improvement implementation, including refresher trainings as necessary.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10021713
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-100217132023-03-17 Evaluation of the Nigeria national HIV rapid testing algorithm Iriemenam, Nnaemeka C. Mpamugo, Augustine Ikpeazu, Akudo Okunoye, Olumide O. Onokevbagbe, Edewede Bassey, Orji O. Tapdiyel, Jelpe Alagi, Matthias A. Meribe, Chidozie Ahmed, Mukhtar L. Ikwulono, Gabriel Aguolu, Rose Ashefor, Gregory Nzelu, Charles Ehoche, Akipu Ezra, Babatunde Obioha, Christine Baffa Sule, Ibrahim Adedokun, Oluwasanmi Mba, Nwando Ihekweazu, Chikwe Charurat, Manhattan Lindsay, Brianna Stafford, Kristen A. Ibrahim, Dalhatu Swaminathan, Mahesh Yufenyuy, Ernest L. Parekh, Bharat S. Adebajo, Sylvia Abimiku, Alash’le Okoye, McPaul I. PLOS Glob Public Health Research Article Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) diagnosis remains the gateway to HIV care and treatment. However, due to changes in HIV prevalence and testing coverage across different geopolitical zones, it is crucial to evaluate the national HIV testing algorithm as false positivity due to low prevalence could be detrimental to both the client and the service delivery. Therefore, we evaluated the performance of the national HIV rapid testing algorithm using specimens collected from multiple HIV testing services (HTS) sites and compared the results from different HIV prevalence levels across the six geopolitical zones of Nigeria. The evaluation employed a dual approach, retrospective, and prospective. The retrospective evaluation focused on a desktop review of program data (n = 492,880) collated from patients attending routine HTS from six geopolitical zones of Nigeria between January 2017 and December 2019. The prospective component utilized samples (n = 2,895) collected from the field at the HTS and tested using the current national serial HIV rapid testing algorithm. These samples were transported to the National Reference Laboratory (NRL), Abuja, and were re-tested using the national HIV rapid testing algorithm and HIV-1/2 supplementary assays (Geenius to confirm positives and resolve discordance and multiplex assay). The retrospective component of the study revealed that the overall proportion of HIV positives, based on the selected areas, was 5.7% (28,319/492,880) within the study period, and the discordant rate between tests 1 and 2 was 1.1%. The prospective component of the study indicated no significant differences between the test performed at the field using the national HIV rapid testing algorithm and the re-testing performed at the NRL. The comparison between the test performed at the field using the national HIV rapid testing algorithm and Geenius HIV-1/2 supplementary assay showed an agreement rate of 95.2%, while that of the NRL was 99.3%. In addition, the comparison of the field results with HIV multiplex assay indicated a sensitivity of 96.6%, the specificity of 98.2%, PPV of 97.0%, and Kappa Statistic of 0.95, and that of the NRL with HIV multiplex assay was 99.2%, 99.4%, 99.0%, and 0.99, respectively. Results show that the Nigeria national serial HIV rapid testing algorithm performed very well across the target settings. However, the algorithm’s performance in the field was lower than the performance outcomes under a controlled environment in the NRL. There is a need to target testers in the field for routine continuous quality improvement implementation, including refresher trainings as necessary. Public Library of Science 2022-11-02 /pmc/articles/PMC10021713/ /pubmed/36962660 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001077 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Iriemenam, Nnaemeka C.
Mpamugo, Augustine
Ikpeazu, Akudo
Okunoye, Olumide O.
Onokevbagbe, Edewede
Bassey, Orji O.
Tapdiyel, Jelpe
Alagi, Matthias A.
Meribe, Chidozie
Ahmed, Mukhtar L.
Ikwulono, Gabriel
Aguolu, Rose
Ashefor, Gregory
Nzelu, Charles
Ehoche, Akipu
Ezra, Babatunde
Obioha, Christine
Baffa Sule, Ibrahim
Adedokun, Oluwasanmi
Mba, Nwando
Ihekweazu, Chikwe
Charurat, Manhattan
Lindsay, Brianna
Stafford, Kristen A.
Ibrahim, Dalhatu
Swaminathan, Mahesh
Yufenyuy, Ernest L.
Parekh, Bharat S.
Adebajo, Sylvia
Abimiku, Alash’le
Okoye, McPaul I.
Evaluation of the Nigeria national HIV rapid testing algorithm
title Evaluation of the Nigeria national HIV rapid testing algorithm
title_full Evaluation of the Nigeria national HIV rapid testing algorithm
title_fullStr Evaluation of the Nigeria national HIV rapid testing algorithm
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the Nigeria national HIV rapid testing algorithm
title_short Evaluation of the Nigeria national HIV rapid testing algorithm
title_sort evaluation of the nigeria national hiv rapid testing algorithm
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10021713/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36962660
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001077
work_keys_str_mv AT iriemenamnnaemekac evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT mpamugoaugustine evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT ikpeazuakudo evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT okunoyeolumideo evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT onokevbagbeedewede evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT basseyorjio evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT tapdiyeljelpe evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT alagimatthiasa evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT meribechidozie evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT ahmedmukhtarl evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT ikwulonogabriel evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT aguolurose evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT asheforgregory evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT nzelucharles evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT ehocheakipu evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT ezrababatunde evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT obiohachristine evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT baffasuleibrahim evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT adedokunoluwasanmi evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT mbanwando evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT ihekweazuchikwe evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT charuratmanhattan evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT lindsaybrianna evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT staffordkristena evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT ibrahimdalhatu evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT swaminathanmahesh evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT yufenyuyernestl evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT parekhbharats evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT adebajosylvia evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT abimikualashle evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT okoyemcpauli evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm
AT evaluationofthenigerianationalhivrapidtestingalgorithm