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HIV-1 Recent Infection Testing Algorithm With Antiretroviral Drug Detection to Improve Accuracy of Incidence Estimates

Authors :
Frehywot Eshetu
Hetal Patel
Ernest L. Yufenyuy
Assegid Mengistu
Yohannes Mengistu
Andrew C. Voetsch
Paul Stupp
Kristin Brown
Owen Mugurungi
Daniel B Williams
Godfrey Musuka
Fred Asiimwe
Munyaradzi Pasipamire
Emily Kainne Dokubo
John N Kiiru
Mervi Detorio
Stephen McCracken
Prisca Chikwanda
Roger Lobognon
Dorothy Aibo
Andrew Kabala
George S Mgomella
Sam Biraro
Clement B. Ndongmo
Shirish Balachandra
Sindisiwe Dlamini
Bharat Parekh
Optatus Malewo
Jennifer Ward
Anne-Cécile Zoung-Kanyi Bissek
Harriet Nuwagaba-Biribonwoha
Elizabeth Kampira
Belete Tegbaru
Laura T. Eno
Judith Shang
Frieda S Winterhalter
Muthoni Junghae
Yen T Duong
Richard C N Mwesigwa
Trudy Dobbs
Leonard Kingwara
Jeremiah Mushi
Suzue Saito
Danielle Payne
Source :
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2021.

Abstract

Background HIV-1 incidence calculation currently includes recency classification by HIV-1 incidence assay and unsuppressed viral load (VL ≥ 1000 copies/mL) in a recent infection testing algorithm (RITA). However, persons with recent classification not virally suppressed and taking antiretroviral (ARV) medication may be misclassified. Setting We used data from 13 African household surveys to describe the impact of an ARV-adjusted RITA on HIV-1 incidence estimates. Methods HIV-seropositive samples were tested for recency using the HIV-1 Limiting Antigen (LAg)-Avidity enzyme immunoassay, HIV-1 viral load, ARVs used in each country, and ARV drug resistance. LAg-recent result was defined as normalized optical density values ≤1.5. We compared HIV-1 incidence estimates using 2 RITA: RITA1: LAg-recent + VL ≥ 1000 copies/mL and RITA2: RITA1 + undetectable ARV. We explored RITA2 with self-reported ARV use and with clinical history. Results Overall, 357 adult HIV-positive participants were classified as having recent infection with RITA1. RITA2 reclassified 55 (15.4%) persons with detectable ARV as having long-term infection. Those with detectable ARV were significantly more likely to be aware of their HIV-positive status (84% vs. 10%) and had higher levels of drug resistance (74% vs. 26%) than those without detectable ARV. RITA2 incidence was lower than RITA1 incidence (range, 0%-30% decrease), resulting in decreased estimated new infections from 390,000 to 341,000 across the 13 countries. Incidence estimates were similar using detectable or self-reported ARV (R2 > 0.995). Conclusions Including ARV in RITA2 improved the accuracy of HIV-1 incidence estimates by removing participants with likely long-term HIV infection.

Details

ISSN :
15254135
Volume :
87
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ff25626f1cbe94350c36ee8fc7629630