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Assessing Very Early Infant Diagnosis Turnaround Times: Findings from a Birth Testing Pilot in Lesotho

Very early infant diagnosis (VEID) (testing within two weeks of life), combined with rapid treatment initiation, could reduce early infant mortality. Our study evaluated turnaround time (TAT) to receipt of infants' HIV test results and ART initiation if HIV-infected, with and without birth test...

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Autores principales: Gill, Michelle M., Hoffman, Heather J., Mokone, Majoalane, Tukei, Vincent J., Nchephe, Matsepeli, Phalatse, Mamakhetha, Tiam, Appolinaire, Guay, Laura, Mofenson, Lynne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5749171/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29410914
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2572594
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author Gill, Michelle M.
Hoffman, Heather J.
Mokone, Majoalane
Tukei, Vincent J.
Nchephe, Matsepeli
Phalatse, Mamakhetha
Tiam, Appolinaire
Guay, Laura
Mofenson, Lynne
author_facet Gill, Michelle M.
Hoffman, Heather J.
Mokone, Majoalane
Tukei, Vincent J.
Nchephe, Matsepeli
Phalatse, Mamakhetha
Tiam, Appolinaire
Guay, Laura
Mofenson, Lynne
author_sort Gill, Michelle M.
collection PubMed
description Very early infant diagnosis (VEID) (testing within two weeks of life), combined with rapid treatment initiation, could reduce early infant mortality. Our study evaluated turnaround time (TAT) to receipt of infants' HIV test results and ART initiation if HIV-infected, with and without birth testing availability. Data from facility records and national databases were collected for 12 facilities offering VEID, as part of an observational prospective cohort study, and 10 noncohort facilities. HIV-exposed infants born in January–June 2016 and any cohort infant diagnosed as HIV-infected at birth or six weeks were included. The median TAT from blood draw to caregiver result receipt was 76.5 days at birth and 63 and 70 days at six weeks at cohort and noncohort facilities, respectively. HIV-exposed infants tested at birth were approximately one month younger when their caregivers received results versus those tested at six weeks. Infants diagnosed at birth initiated ART about two months earlier (median 6.4 weeks old) than those identified at six weeks (median 14.8 weeks). However, the long TAT for testing at both birth and six weeks illustrates the prolonged process for specimen transport and result return that could compromise the effectiveness of adding VEID to existing overburdened EID systems.
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spelling pubmed-57491712018-02-06 Assessing Very Early Infant Diagnosis Turnaround Times: Findings from a Birth Testing Pilot in Lesotho Gill, Michelle M. Hoffman, Heather J. Mokone, Majoalane Tukei, Vincent J. Nchephe, Matsepeli Phalatse, Mamakhetha Tiam, Appolinaire Guay, Laura Mofenson, Lynne AIDS Res Treat Research Article Very early infant diagnosis (VEID) (testing within two weeks of life), combined with rapid treatment initiation, could reduce early infant mortality. Our study evaluated turnaround time (TAT) to receipt of infants' HIV test results and ART initiation if HIV-infected, with and without birth testing availability. Data from facility records and national databases were collected for 12 facilities offering VEID, as part of an observational prospective cohort study, and 10 noncohort facilities. HIV-exposed infants born in January–June 2016 and any cohort infant diagnosed as HIV-infected at birth or six weeks were included. The median TAT from blood draw to caregiver result receipt was 76.5 days at birth and 63 and 70 days at six weeks at cohort and noncohort facilities, respectively. HIV-exposed infants tested at birth were approximately one month younger when their caregivers received results versus those tested at six weeks. Infants diagnosed at birth initiated ART about two months earlier (median 6.4 weeks old) than those identified at six weeks (median 14.8 weeks). However, the long TAT for testing at both birth and six weeks illustrates the prolonged process for specimen transport and result return that could compromise the effectiveness of adding VEID to existing overburdened EID systems. Hindawi 2017 2017-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC5749171/ /pubmed/29410914 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2572594 Text en Copyright © 2017 Michelle M. Gill et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gill, Michelle M.
Hoffman, Heather J.
Mokone, Majoalane
Tukei, Vincent J.
Nchephe, Matsepeli
Phalatse, Mamakhetha
Tiam, Appolinaire
Guay, Laura
Mofenson, Lynne
Assessing Very Early Infant Diagnosis Turnaround Times: Findings from a Birth Testing Pilot in Lesotho
title Assessing Very Early Infant Diagnosis Turnaround Times: Findings from a Birth Testing Pilot in Lesotho
title_full Assessing Very Early Infant Diagnosis Turnaround Times: Findings from a Birth Testing Pilot in Lesotho
title_fullStr Assessing Very Early Infant Diagnosis Turnaround Times: Findings from a Birth Testing Pilot in Lesotho
title_full_unstemmed Assessing Very Early Infant Diagnosis Turnaround Times: Findings from a Birth Testing Pilot in Lesotho
title_short Assessing Very Early Infant Diagnosis Turnaround Times: Findings from a Birth Testing Pilot in Lesotho
title_sort assessing very early infant diagnosis turnaround times: findings from a birth testing pilot in lesotho
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5749171/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29410914
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2572594
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