1. Optimizing resources to reduce costs to determine HIV viral load in limited resources settings
- Author
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Amalia Girón-Callejas, Ricardo Mendizabal-Burastero, Elizabeth Yax, Axel Martínez, and Carlos Mejía-Villatoro
- Subjects
HIV ,viral load ,cost savings ,cost efficiency analysis ,strategies. ,Medicine ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 - Abstract
Introduction: HIV viral load testing is a key factor to evaluate the accomplishment of the UNAIDS target of 90% of viral suppression among people receiving antiretroviral therapy. Pooled samples are a potentially accurate and economic approach in resource-constrained settings, but efficiency can be negatively affected by high prevalence rates of virological failure. Objective: Strategies were assessed to increase the relative efficiency of pooled HIV viral load testing in resource-constrained settings. Materials and methods: We evaluated two strategies: a) plasma samples were not included in pools if patients had 1,000 copies/ml, or were antiretroviral therapy naïve patients, and b) plasma pools were organized separately for first and second-line antiretroviral therapy regimens. Individual viral load tests were used to compare pooled results. Results: Negative predictive values were similar for patients on first (100.0%; 95% CI 99.5 to 100.0) and second-line antiretroviral therapy regimens (99.4%; 95% CI 96.9 to 99.9). However, the incidence of virological failure among individuals on first-line antiretroviral therapy was lower than second-line antiretroviral therapy patients (p
- Published
- 2017
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