Literature DB >> 11074470

HIV-1 ICD p24 antigen detection in ugandan infants: use in early diagnosis of infection and as a marker of disease progression.

L A Guay1, D L Hom, S R Kabengera, E M Piwowar-Manning, P Kataaha, C Ndugwa, L H Marum, I Kalyesubula, J B Jackson.   

Abstract

The objective of this study was to determine the use of immune-complex dissociated (ICD) p24 antigen detection for the diagnosis and prognosis of HIV-1 infection in Ugandan children. Plasma collected prospectively from children born to HIV-1 infected Ugandan women was stored and later analyzed for the presence of neutralizable HIV-1 p24 antigen using the Coulter ICD p24 antigen and neutralization kits. HIV-1 infection status, disease progression, and survival of the children were determined. Specimens from 311 children born to HIV-1 infected women, including 138 HIV-1 infected children, and 113 children born to negative women were tested. Sixty-nine (50%) infected children were p24 antigen positive at least once. For early HIV-1 diagnosis, the specificity and positive predictive value of the assay were consistently high (>95% and >83% respectively), but the sensitivity was low (6-53%), especially in the first months of life. The presence of p24 antigenemia in the first two years of life was associated with poor survival (20%) by 80 months of age compared with infected children without antigenemia (43%, P < 0.001). Early detection of p24 antigen (</=2 months) was associated with higher mortality than first detection at an older age (>6 months, P < 0.001). The data suggest that ICD p24 antigen detection is not a sensitive method for the determination of infant HIV-1 status in our cohort of HIV-1 infected Ugandan children tested in the first two years of life. There was a strong correlation, however, between the presence and time of onset of p24 antigenemia and mortality among HIV-1 infected children. Copyright 2000 Wiley-Liss Inc.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11074470     DOI: 10.1002/1096-9071(200012)62:4<426::aid-jmv6>3.0.co;2-s

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Virol        ISSN: 0146-6615            Impact factor:   2.327


  2 in total

1.  Diagnostic accuracy of ultrasensitive heat-denatured HIV-1 p24 antigen in non-B subtypes in Kampala, Uganda.

Authors:  L A Spacek; F Lutwama; H M Shihab; J Summerton; M R Kamya; A Ronald; O Laeyendecker; T C Quinn; H Mayanja-Kizza
Journal:  Int J STD AIDS       Date:  2011-06       Impact factor: 1.359

2.  Total lymphocyte count: not a surrogate marker for risk of death in HIV-infected Ugandan children.

Authors:  Philippa M Musoke; Alicia M Young; Maxensia A Owor; Irene R Lubega; Elizabeth R Brown; Francis A Mmiro; Lynne M Mofenson; J Brooks Jackson; Mary Glenn Fowler; Laura A Guay
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr       Date:  2008-10-01       Impact factor: 3.731

  2 in total

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