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Accurate dried blood spots collection in the community using non-medically trained personnel could support scaling up routine viral load testing in resource limited settings

Regular plasma HIV-RNA testing for persons living with HIV on antiretroviral therapy (ART) is now the global standard, but as many as 60% of persons in Africa today on ART do not have access to standard laboratory HIV-RNA assays. As a result, patients in Zambia often receive treatment without any me...

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Autores principales: Sikombe, Kombatende, Hantuba, Cardinal, Musukuma, Kalo, Sharma, Anjali, Padian, Nancy, Holmes, Charles, Czaicki, Nancy, Simbeza, Sandra, Somwe, Paul, Bolton-Moore, Carolyn, Sikazwe, Izukanji, Geng, Elvin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6797100/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31622394
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223573
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author Sikombe, Kombatende
Hantuba, Cardinal
Musukuma, Kalo
Sharma, Anjali
Padian, Nancy
Holmes, Charles
Czaicki, Nancy
Simbeza, Sandra
Somwe, Paul
Bolton-Moore, Carolyn
Sikazwe, Izukanji
Geng, Elvin
author_facet Sikombe, Kombatende
Hantuba, Cardinal
Musukuma, Kalo
Sharma, Anjali
Padian, Nancy
Holmes, Charles
Czaicki, Nancy
Simbeza, Sandra
Somwe, Paul
Bolton-Moore, Carolyn
Sikazwe, Izukanji
Geng, Elvin
author_sort Sikombe, Kombatende
collection PubMed
description Regular plasma HIV-RNA testing for persons living with HIV on antiretroviral therapy (ART) is now the global standard, but as many as 60% of persons in Africa today on ART do not have access to standard laboratory HIV-RNA assays. As a result, patients in Zambia often receive treatment without any means of determining true virologic failure, which poses a risk of premature switch of ART regimens and widespread HIV drug resistance. Dry blood spots (DBS) on the other hand require unskilled personnel and less complex storage supply chain so are ideal to capture viral-load results from HIV patients outside clinic settings. We assess collection of DBS in the community using non-medically trained personnel (NMP) and documented challenges. We trained 23 NMP to collect DBS from lost to follow-up (LTFU) patients in 4 rural and urban Zambian districts. We developed a phlebotomy box to transport DBS without contamination at ambient temperature and concomitant training and standard operating procedures. We evaluated this through field observations, bi-weekly meetings, reports, and staff meetings. The laboratory assessed DBS quality for testing validity. We attempted to collect DBS from 357 participants in the community. Though individual reasons for refusal from the remaining 37% were not collected, NMPs reported privacy concerns, awkward box-size which drew attention in the community and fears of undisclosed uses of samples related to witchcraft and circulating narratives about past research. Successful DBS collection was not associated with patient gender, age, time on ART, enrolment CD4, facility. DBS viral-load collection by NMP is feasible in Zambia. Our training approach and assessments of NMP not part of the health system can be extended to patients by giving them more responsibility to manage their own differentiated care groups. Concerted efforts that compare collection of DBS by NMP to those collected by skilled-medical personnel are needed.
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spelling pubmed-67971002019-10-20 Accurate dried blood spots collection in the community using non-medically trained personnel could support scaling up routine viral load testing in resource limited settings Sikombe, Kombatende Hantuba, Cardinal Musukuma, Kalo Sharma, Anjali Padian, Nancy Holmes, Charles Czaicki, Nancy Simbeza, Sandra Somwe, Paul Bolton-Moore, Carolyn Sikazwe, Izukanji Geng, Elvin PLoS One Research Article Regular plasma HIV-RNA testing for persons living with HIV on antiretroviral therapy (ART) is now the global standard, but as many as 60% of persons in Africa today on ART do not have access to standard laboratory HIV-RNA assays. As a result, patients in Zambia often receive treatment without any means of determining true virologic failure, which poses a risk of premature switch of ART regimens and widespread HIV drug resistance. Dry blood spots (DBS) on the other hand require unskilled personnel and less complex storage supply chain so are ideal to capture viral-load results from HIV patients outside clinic settings. We assess collection of DBS in the community using non-medically trained personnel (NMP) and documented challenges. We trained 23 NMP to collect DBS from lost to follow-up (LTFU) patients in 4 rural and urban Zambian districts. We developed a phlebotomy box to transport DBS without contamination at ambient temperature and concomitant training and standard operating procedures. We evaluated this through field observations, bi-weekly meetings, reports, and staff meetings. The laboratory assessed DBS quality for testing validity. We attempted to collect DBS from 357 participants in the community. Though individual reasons for refusal from the remaining 37% were not collected, NMPs reported privacy concerns, awkward box-size which drew attention in the community and fears of undisclosed uses of samples related to witchcraft and circulating narratives about past research. Successful DBS collection was not associated with patient gender, age, time on ART, enrolment CD4, facility. DBS viral-load collection by NMP is feasible in Zambia. Our training approach and assessments of NMP not part of the health system can be extended to patients by giving them more responsibility to manage their own differentiated care groups. Concerted efforts that compare collection of DBS by NMP to those collected by skilled-medical personnel are needed. Public Library of Science 2019-10-17 /pmc/articles/PMC6797100/ /pubmed/31622394 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223573 Text en © 2019 Sikombe 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
Sikombe, Kombatende
Hantuba, Cardinal
Musukuma, Kalo
Sharma, Anjali
Padian, Nancy
Holmes, Charles
Czaicki, Nancy
Simbeza, Sandra
Somwe, Paul
Bolton-Moore, Carolyn
Sikazwe, Izukanji
Geng, Elvin
Accurate dried blood spots collection in the community using non-medically trained personnel could support scaling up routine viral load testing in resource limited settings
title Accurate dried blood spots collection in the community using non-medically trained personnel could support scaling up routine viral load testing in resource limited settings
title_full Accurate dried blood spots collection in the community using non-medically trained personnel could support scaling up routine viral load testing in resource limited settings
title_fullStr Accurate dried blood spots collection in the community using non-medically trained personnel could support scaling up routine viral load testing in resource limited settings
title_full_unstemmed Accurate dried blood spots collection in the community using non-medically trained personnel could support scaling up routine viral load testing in resource limited settings
title_short Accurate dried blood spots collection in the community using non-medically trained personnel could support scaling up routine viral load testing in resource limited settings
title_sort accurate dried blood spots collection in the community using non-medically trained personnel could support scaling up routine viral load testing in resource limited settings
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6797100/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31622394
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223573
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