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Evaluation of near point‐of‐care viral load implementation in public health facilities across seven countries in sub‐Saharan Africa

INTRODUCTION: In many low‐ and middle‐income countries, HIV viral load (VL) testing occurs at centralized laboratories and time‐to‐result‐delivery is lengthy, preventing timely monitoring of HIV treatment adherence. Near point‐of‐care (POC) devices, which are placed within health facility laboratori...

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Autores principales: Boeke, Caroline E, Joseph, Jessica, Atem, Charles, Banda, Clement, Coulibaly, Khady Diatou, Doi, Naoko, Gunda, Andrews, Kandulu, James, Kiernan, Brianán, Kingwara, Leonard, Maokola, Werner, Maparo, Tatenda, Mbaye, Rose Nadege, Mtumbuka, Esther, Mziray, Joseph, Ngugi, Catherine, Nkakulu, Jeanine, Nzuobontane, Divine, Okomo Assoumo, Marie Claire, Peter, Trevor, Rioja, Maria R, Sacks, Jilian A, Simbi, Raiva, Vojnov, Lara, Khan, Shaukat A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7811577/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33455081
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jia2.25663
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author Boeke, Caroline E
Joseph, Jessica
Atem, Charles
Banda, Clement
Coulibaly, Khady Diatou
Doi, Naoko
Gunda, Andrews
Kandulu, James
Kiernan, Brianán
Kingwara, Leonard
Maokola, Werner
Maparo, Tatenda
Mbaye, Rose Nadege
Mtumbuka, Esther
Mziray, Joseph
Ngugi, Catherine
Nkakulu, Jeanine
Nzuobontane, Divine
Okomo Assoumo, Marie Claire
Peter, Trevor
Rioja, Maria R
Sacks, Jilian A
Simbi, Raiva
Vojnov, Lara
Khan, Shaukat A
author_facet Boeke, Caroline E
Joseph, Jessica
Atem, Charles
Banda, Clement
Coulibaly, Khady Diatou
Doi, Naoko
Gunda, Andrews
Kandulu, James
Kiernan, Brianán
Kingwara, Leonard
Maokola, Werner
Maparo, Tatenda
Mbaye, Rose Nadege
Mtumbuka, Esther
Mziray, Joseph
Ngugi, Catherine
Nkakulu, Jeanine
Nzuobontane, Divine
Okomo Assoumo, Marie Claire
Peter, Trevor
Rioja, Maria R
Sacks, Jilian A
Simbi, Raiva
Vojnov, Lara
Khan, Shaukat A
author_sort Boeke, Caroline E
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: In many low‐ and middle‐income countries, HIV viral load (VL) testing occurs at centralized laboratories and time‐to‐result‐delivery is lengthy, preventing timely monitoring of HIV treatment adherence. Near point‐of‐care (POC) devices, which are placed within health facility laboratories rather than clinics themselves (i.e. “true” POC), can offer VL in conjunction with centralized laboratories to expedite clinical decision making and improve outcomes, especially for patients at high risk of treatment failure. We assessed impacts of near‐POC VL testing on result receipt and clinical action in public sector programmes in Cameroon, Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, Malawi, Senegal, Tanzania and Zimbabwe. METHODS: Routine health data were collected retrospectively after introducing near‐POC VL testing at 57 public sector health facilities (2017 to 2019, country‐dependent). Where possible, key indicators were compared to data from patients receiving centralized laboratory testing using hazard ratios and the Somers’ D test. RESULTS: Data were collected from 6795 tests conducted on near‐POC and 17614 tests on centralized laboratory‐based platforms. Thirty‐one percent (2062/6694) of near‐POC tests were conducted for high‐risk populations: pregnant and breastfeeding women, children and those with suspected failure. Compared to conventional testing, near‐POC improved the median time from sample collection to return of results to patient [six vs. sixty‐eight days, effect size: −32.2%; 95% CI: −41.0% to −23.4%] and to clinical action for individuals with an elevated HIV VL [three vs. fourty‐nine days, effect size: −35.4%; 95% CI: −46.0% to −24.8%]. Near‐POC VL results were two times more likely to be returned to the patient within 90 days compared to centralized tests [50% (1781/3594) vs. 27% (4172/15271); aHR: 2.22, 95% CI: 2.05 to 2.39]. Thirty‐seven percent (340/925) of patients with an elevated near‐POC HIV VL result had documented clinical follow‐up actions within 30 days compared to 7% (167/2276) for centralized testing. CONCLUSIONS: Near‐POC VL testing enabled rapid test result delivery for high‐risk populations and led to significant improvements in the timeliness of patient result receipt compared to centralized testing. While there was some improvement in time‐to‐clinical action with near‐POC VL testing, major gaps remained. Strengthening of systems supporting the utilization of results for patient management are needed to truly capitalize on the benefits of decentralized testing.
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spelling pubmed-78115772021-01-22 Evaluation of near point‐of‐care viral load implementation in public health facilities across seven countries in sub‐Saharan Africa Boeke, Caroline E Joseph, Jessica Atem, Charles Banda, Clement Coulibaly, Khady Diatou Doi, Naoko Gunda, Andrews Kandulu, James Kiernan, Brianán Kingwara, Leonard Maokola, Werner Maparo, Tatenda Mbaye, Rose Nadege Mtumbuka, Esther Mziray, Joseph Ngugi, Catherine Nkakulu, Jeanine Nzuobontane, Divine Okomo Assoumo, Marie Claire Peter, Trevor Rioja, Maria R Sacks, Jilian A Simbi, Raiva Vojnov, Lara Khan, Shaukat A J Int AIDS Soc Research Articles INTRODUCTION: In many low‐ and middle‐income countries, HIV viral load (VL) testing occurs at centralized laboratories and time‐to‐result‐delivery is lengthy, preventing timely monitoring of HIV treatment adherence. Near point‐of‐care (POC) devices, which are placed within health facility laboratories rather than clinics themselves (i.e. “true” POC), can offer VL in conjunction with centralized laboratories to expedite clinical decision making and improve outcomes, especially for patients at high risk of treatment failure. We assessed impacts of near‐POC VL testing on result receipt and clinical action in public sector programmes in Cameroon, Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, Malawi, Senegal, Tanzania and Zimbabwe. METHODS: Routine health data were collected retrospectively after introducing near‐POC VL testing at 57 public sector health facilities (2017 to 2019, country‐dependent). Where possible, key indicators were compared to data from patients receiving centralized laboratory testing using hazard ratios and the Somers’ D test. RESULTS: Data were collected from 6795 tests conducted on near‐POC and 17614 tests on centralized laboratory‐based platforms. Thirty‐one percent (2062/6694) of near‐POC tests were conducted for high‐risk populations: pregnant and breastfeeding women, children and those with suspected failure. Compared to conventional testing, near‐POC improved the median time from sample collection to return of results to patient [six vs. sixty‐eight days, effect size: −32.2%; 95% CI: −41.0% to −23.4%] and to clinical action for individuals with an elevated HIV VL [three vs. fourty‐nine days, effect size: −35.4%; 95% CI: −46.0% to −24.8%]. Near‐POC VL results were two times more likely to be returned to the patient within 90 days compared to centralized tests [50% (1781/3594) vs. 27% (4172/15271); aHR: 2.22, 95% CI: 2.05 to 2.39]. Thirty‐seven percent (340/925) of patients with an elevated near‐POC HIV VL result had documented clinical follow‐up actions within 30 days compared to 7% (167/2276) for centralized testing. CONCLUSIONS: Near‐POC VL testing enabled rapid test result delivery for high‐risk populations and led to significant improvements in the timeliness of patient result receipt compared to centralized testing. While there was some improvement in time‐to‐clinical action with near‐POC VL testing, major gaps remained. Strengthening of systems supporting the utilization of results for patient management are needed to truly capitalize on the benefits of decentralized testing. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-01-16 /pmc/articles/PMC7811577/ /pubmed/33455081 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jia2.25663 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Journal of the International AIDS Society published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of the International AIDS Society. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Boeke, Caroline E
Joseph, Jessica
Atem, Charles
Banda, Clement
Coulibaly, Khady Diatou
Doi, Naoko
Gunda, Andrews
Kandulu, James
Kiernan, Brianán
Kingwara, Leonard
Maokola, Werner
Maparo, Tatenda
Mbaye, Rose Nadege
Mtumbuka, Esther
Mziray, Joseph
Ngugi, Catherine
Nkakulu, Jeanine
Nzuobontane, Divine
Okomo Assoumo, Marie Claire
Peter, Trevor
Rioja, Maria R
Sacks, Jilian A
Simbi, Raiva
Vojnov, Lara
Khan, Shaukat A
Evaluation of near point‐of‐care viral load implementation in public health facilities across seven countries in sub‐Saharan Africa
title Evaluation of near point‐of‐care viral load implementation in public health facilities across seven countries in sub‐Saharan Africa
title_full Evaluation of near point‐of‐care viral load implementation in public health facilities across seven countries in sub‐Saharan Africa
title_fullStr Evaluation of near point‐of‐care viral load implementation in public health facilities across seven countries in sub‐Saharan Africa
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of near point‐of‐care viral load implementation in public health facilities across seven countries in sub‐Saharan Africa
title_short Evaluation of near point‐of‐care viral load implementation in public health facilities across seven countries in sub‐Saharan Africa
title_sort evaluation of near point‐of‐care viral load implementation in public health facilities across seven countries in sub‐saharan africa
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7811577/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33455081
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jia2.25663
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