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HIV Testing
CDC power point edited by M. Myers
Message
There are numbers of
tests
They should be used in
combination (strategies)
Combinations must be
consistent
Laboratory Tests
diagnosis of infection
acute, recent, established or late
stage disease
prognostic markers
monitoring of ARV therapies
immunological and virological
markers
toxicities
diagnosis of opportunistic
infections
drug resistance testing
‘typical’ primary HIV-1 infection
symptoms
symptoms
HIV proviral DNA
HIV antibodies
‘window’
period
HIV viral load
HIV-1 p24 antigen
0
1
1° infection
2
3
weeks
4
5
6
/
2
Time following infection
4
6
years
8
10
HIV Assays: Methodologies
FOR THE DIAGNOSIS (DETECTION)
Virus Detection
EIA
Simple, rapid
tests
Immunoblots
Antibody
Antigen
Detection
Incident assays
DNA
(RNA)
+
HIV Testing Direct Detection of Virus
HIV antigen– serology
- In isolation
- Diagnosis of primary infection viraemia
Virus culture / isolation
Nucleic acid detection - (NAT)
Clinical uses
Proviral DNA vs. plasma RNA (viral load)
resolution of inconclusive serology / neonatal
subtyping
drug resistance monitoring
Available Assays
EIAs including
rapid, simple
particle agglutination,
dot/blot
Western blot
Antigen & Ab/Ag
Incidence assays
Direct Virus Detection
Particle Agglutination
Western Blot
Expensive – $ 80 - 100
technically more difficult
visual interpretation
lack standardisation
- performance
- interpretation
- indeterminate reactions –
resolution of ??
‘Gold Standard’ for confirmation
Antibody testing
limitations
Difficulties in interpretation
Limitations - ‘window period’
antibodies appear within 3-4 weeks
Direct detection – HIV p24 antigen or
DNA/RNA (NAT) – pre-antibody
Combo test = earlier detection
Primary infection + therapy = delayed
antibody response
Ag/Ab Combo tests
Ab
&
Ag
Ag & Ab
Detection of Ag & Ab in a single
test
utility in primary infection – preseroconversion ‘window period’
Incident populations – ‘at risk’
Blood bank
Automated platforms available
Issues with Combo
Assays
Testing strategies
False reactivity rates
Confirmation strategies
Replacement of other assays
(especially in the USA)
Cost
Legal issues
What about simple assays?
HIV Determine test
Detect HIV-1 & HIV-2
Cannot differentiate
Procedural control – anti Hu IgG
Whole blood or serum/plasma
Widely available
No additional reagents required
Room temperature storage
15 minutes to result
BioRad HIV-1/2
Multispot
Detects HIV-1 and HIV-2
Will differentiate 1 and 2
Procedural control – anti-Hu IgG
Serum / plasma only
Additional reagents (included)
Requires refrigerated storage
‘Immunoconcentration’ principle
15 minutes to result
WHO Recommended Strategies
Strategy I Test all samples with one EIA
Strategy II Strategy I with all reactives
retested in a more specific test with
different principle and/or antigen.
Strategy III Strategy II with reactives
tested in a third test differing from the
first two tests.
WHO Recommended Testing
Strategies
Transfusion safety
Strategy I
Surveillance
>10%
<10%
Diagnosis
Risk factors
No risk factors
Strategy II
>10%
II
<10% III
I
II
Testing Strategies
AIM:
To develop the logic used in
establishing the use of HIV tests
(testing strategies)
Objectives of Testing Strategies
To achieve the correct diagnosis in the most
efficient manner
To maintain consistency in testing
To know the predictive value of the testing
process
To develop baseline data for assessing
changes
To deliver useful results
Aims in Developing HIV Testing
Strategies
To arrive at the correct sero-diagnosis
To minimise total testing; thus cost
Minimise samples classed as indeterminate
or dual reactors
Detect HIV-1 negative but HIV-2 positive
Follow likely seroconverters (HIV-1 or -2)
Screening Assays
Are used to detect antibody-- specific or
nonspecific
Are designed to handle large numbers of
samples with rapid throughput
Must be high performance
Should include a full range of HIV antigens
Serological Testing Strategy
SCREENING TEST, highly sensitive
NEG
REACTIVE
SUPPLEMENTAL TEST,
highly sensitive & higher
specificity
POS
NEG
IND
POS
ADDITIONAL
TESTS
NEG
IND
HIV Testing Strategy
HIV1/2
SCREEN
NEG
REACTIVE
POS
HIV-1
WB
NEG
IND
POS
ADDITIONAL
TESTS
NEG
IND
POINT OF REPORTING
Supplemental Assays
Range of assays that further define
sero-status
High Performance (higher specificity)
The Use of Screening Assays
Define samples as negative for a given
analyte
Enable high throughput
Predictive Values
Positive Predictive Values:
The likelihood of a sample identified as a
reactive by a test being truly POSITIVE for
the analyte used as the basis of the test.
PPV =
True Positives
X 100%
True Positives + False Reactives
Predictive Values
Negative Predictive Values:
The likelihood that a sample identified as a nonreactive by a test is truly NEGATIVE for the
analyte used as the basis of the test.
NPV =
True Negatives
X 100%
True Negatives + False Negatives
WHO Recommended Strategies
Strategy I Test all samples with one EIA
Strategy II Strategy I with all reactives
retested in a more specific test with
different principle and/or antigen.
Strategy III Strategy II with reactives
tested in a third test differing from the
first two tests.
WHO Recommended Testing
Strategies
Transfusion safety
Strategy I
Surveillance
>10%
<10%
Diagnosis
Risk factors
No risk factors
Strategy II
>10%
II
<10% III
I
II
WHO Guidelines
Other possibilities
strategy for confirmation
combination of affordable & simple assays
different test principles
different antigen preparations
two or three ELISAs or rapid tests
diagnosis confirmed by second sample
detection of virus (PCR)
antigen detection (limited lab.facilities)
Always use a QC sample
Cost of HIV Testing
comparative costs
ELISA (Ab only) - $2 per test
EIA (Ab/Ag combo) - $3.50
rapid test - $10-20 per test
Western blot $80 - 100
p24 antigen $30
PCR - qualitative $80 - 100
PCR - quantitative (viral load) $90 – 150*
DNA sequencing (resistance) $400 – 700
Summary of Testing Strategies
Screening test x1
Eliminates
laboratory
error
R
Screening test x2
RR or R-
POS
+
Supplemental
test
Other tests
NEG
-
NEG
NEG