| Literature DB >> 18348208 |
Trevor Peter1, Anne Badrichani, Emily Wu, Richard Freeman, Bekezela Ncube, Fabiana Ariki, Jennifer Daily, Yoko Shimada, Maurine Murtagh.
Abstract
The scale-up of HIV antiretroviral therapy in recent years has led to a rapid increase in CD4 and CD4% count capacity to meet the diagnostic needs of staging and monitoring disease progression and treatment efficacy in adults and infants. The speed of implementation of this technology has been unrivalled in recent years and has met challenges with technology selection, laboratory infrastructure development, human resource limitations, cost-effectiveness, instrument maintenance, and ensuring testing access and quality. The lessons learned from dealing with these challenges have helped strengthen existing laboratory systems for other diagnostics. They may also facilitate the implementation of new diagnostics in future. Copyright 2008 Clinical Cytometry Society.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18348208 DOI: 10.1002/cyto.b.20416
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytometry B Clin Cytom ISSN: 1552-4949 Impact factor: 3.058