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Performance of point-of-care birth HIV testing in primary health care clinics: An observational cohort study

BACKGROUND: Failure to timely diagnose HIV in infants is a major barrier for scaling-up paediatric antiretroviral treatment (ART). WHO recommends birth testing for earlier diagnosis and to improve test coverage, but current diagnosis takes 2–3 weeks to complete, thereby limiting the ability of care...

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Autores principales: Meggi, Bindiya, Vojnov, Lara, Mabunda, Nedio, Vubil, Adolfo, Zitha, Alcina, Tobaiwa, Ocean, Mudenyanga, Chishamiso, Mutsaka, Dadirayi, Bollinger, Timothy, Loquiha, Osvaldo, Peter, Trevor F., Jani, Ilesh V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6005575/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29912987
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198344
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author Meggi, Bindiya
Vojnov, Lara
Mabunda, Nedio
Vubil, Adolfo
Zitha, Alcina
Tobaiwa, Ocean
Mudenyanga, Chishamiso
Mutsaka, Dadirayi
Bollinger, Timothy
Loquiha, Osvaldo
Peter, Trevor F.
Jani, Ilesh V.
author_facet Meggi, Bindiya
Vojnov, Lara
Mabunda, Nedio
Vubil, Adolfo
Zitha, Alcina
Tobaiwa, Ocean
Mudenyanga, Chishamiso
Mutsaka, Dadirayi
Bollinger, Timothy
Loquiha, Osvaldo
Peter, Trevor F.
Jani, Ilesh V.
author_sort Meggi, Bindiya
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Failure to timely diagnose HIV in infants is a major barrier for scaling-up paediatric antiretroviral treatment (ART). WHO recommends birth testing for earlier diagnosis and to improve test coverage, but current diagnosis takes 2–3 weeks to complete, thereby limiting the ability of care givers to provide follow-on care, especially in low-resource settings. We evaluated the benefit of implementing rapid diagnosis of HIV at birth in primary health care maternity wards in Mozambique. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Infants born to HIV-infected mothers delivering consecutively at eight primary health care clinics were tested within 24 hours of delivery using on-site POC (Alere q HIV1/2 Detect) and standard laboratory (Roche COBAS AmpliPrep/TaqMan HIV-1 qualitative assay v2.0) testing. Infants were also tested at 4–6 weeks of age with both assays. Of 2,350 HIV-exposed infants enrolled in this implementation research study, 33 tested HIV-positive at birth on both assays. Sensitivity and specificity of POC testing compared with laboratory testing at birth were 100% (95% CI 89·4–100·0) and 100% (95% CI 99·8–100·0), respectively. At 4–6 weeks of age, 61 infants were identified as HIV-positive; of these 29 (47·5%) had a positive test at birth. Testing at both birth and 4–6 weeks identified 71 HIV-positive infants compared with 61 infants by testing at 4–6 weeks alone, a 16% increase. Two infants tested positive at birth but tested HIV-negative during follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Adding POC birth testing to the 4–6 week screen may increase access to HIV diagnosis and expedite ART initiation in primary health care settings within low resource settings. Guidance on appropriate confirmatory HIV testing algorithms for birth testing is needed.
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spelling pubmed-60055752018-06-25 Performance of point-of-care birth HIV testing in primary health care clinics: An observational cohort study Meggi, Bindiya Vojnov, Lara Mabunda, Nedio Vubil, Adolfo Zitha, Alcina Tobaiwa, Ocean Mudenyanga, Chishamiso Mutsaka, Dadirayi Bollinger, Timothy Loquiha, Osvaldo Peter, Trevor F. Jani, Ilesh V. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Failure to timely diagnose HIV in infants is a major barrier for scaling-up paediatric antiretroviral treatment (ART). WHO recommends birth testing for earlier diagnosis and to improve test coverage, but current diagnosis takes 2–3 weeks to complete, thereby limiting the ability of care givers to provide follow-on care, especially in low-resource settings. We evaluated the benefit of implementing rapid diagnosis of HIV at birth in primary health care maternity wards in Mozambique. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Infants born to HIV-infected mothers delivering consecutively at eight primary health care clinics were tested within 24 hours of delivery using on-site POC (Alere q HIV1/2 Detect) and standard laboratory (Roche COBAS AmpliPrep/TaqMan HIV-1 qualitative assay v2.0) testing. Infants were also tested at 4–6 weeks of age with both assays. Of 2,350 HIV-exposed infants enrolled in this implementation research study, 33 tested HIV-positive at birth on both assays. Sensitivity and specificity of POC testing compared with laboratory testing at birth were 100% (95% CI 89·4–100·0) and 100% (95% CI 99·8–100·0), respectively. At 4–6 weeks of age, 61 infants were identified as HIV-positive; of these 29 (47·5%) had a positive test at birth. Testing at both birth and 4–6 weeks identified 71 HIV-positive infants compared with 61 infants by testing at 4–6 weeks alone, a 16% increase. Two infants tested positive at birth but tested HIV-negative during follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Adding POC birth testing to the 4–6 week screen may increase access to HIV diagnosis and expedite ART initiation in primary health care settings within low resource settings. Guidance on appropriate confirmatory HIV testing algorithms for birth testing is needed. Public Library of Science 2018-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC6005575/ /pubmed/29912987 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198344 Text en © 2018 Meggi et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Meggi, Bindiya
Vojnov, Lara
Mabunda, Nedio
Vubil, Adolfo
Zitha, Alcina
Tobaiwa, Ocean
Mudenyanga, Chishamiso
Mutsaka, Dadirayi
Bollinger, Timothy
Loquiha, Osvaldo
Peter, Trevor F.
Jani, Ilesh V.
Performance of point-of-care birth HIV testing in primary health care clinics: An observational cohort study
title Performance of point-of-care birth HIV testing in primary health care clinics: An observational cohort study
title_full Performance of point-of-care birth HIV testing in primary health care clinics: An observational cohort study
title_fullStr Performance of point-of-care birth HIV testing in primary health care clinics: An observational cohort study
title_full_unstemmed Performance of point-of-care birth HIV testing in primary health care clinics: An observational cohort study
title_short Performance of point-of-care birth HIV testing in primary health care clinics: An observational cohort study
title_sort performance of point-of-care birth hiv testing in primary health care clinics: an observational cohort study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6005575/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29912987
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198344
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