| Literature DB >> 23487385 |
Sue Napierala Mavedzenge1, Rachel Baggaley, Elizabeth L Corbett.
Abstract
Inadequate uptake of testing for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) remains a primary bottleneck toward universal access to treatment and care, and is an obstacle to realizing the potential of new interventions for preventing HIV infection, including treatment for prevention and preexposure prophylaxis. HIV self-testing offers an approach to scaling up testing that could be high impact, low cost, confidential, and empowering for users. Although HIV self-testing was first considered >20 years ago, it has not been widely implemented. We conducted a review of policy and research on HIV self-testing, which indicates that policy is shifting toward a more flexible approach with less emphasis on pretest counseling and that HIV self-testing has been adopted in a number of settings. Empirical research on self-testing is limited, resulting in a lack of an evidence base upon which to base policy recommendations. Relevant research and investment in programs are urgently needed to enable consideration of developing formalized self-testing programs.Entities:
Keywords: HIV prevention; HIV screening; HIV self-testing; literature review; policy
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23487385 PMCID: PMC3669524 DOI: 10.1093/cid/cit156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Commonly Expressed Arguments Put Forth by Policymakers and Local Health Systems for and Against HIV Self-Testing
| Arguments for: |
| Potential for a dramatic increase in knowledge of HIV status |
| Increased confidentiality |
| Increased convenience |
| Autonomy and empowerment |
| Potential to remove the stigma surrounding HIV |
| Less resource intensive from the healthcare system perspective |
| Arguments against: |
| Greater potential for inaccurate results |
| Psychological danger when decoupling testing and counseling |
| Greater difficulty ensuring referral to treatment and care |
| Potential unethical use of HIV self-testing |
| Self-testing as justification for unprotected sex |
| Concern for safe disposal of biohazard material |
Sources: [8–12].
Abbreviation: HIV, human immunodeficiency virus.
Excerpt from the National Guidelines for HIV Testing and Counselling in Kenya, 2009
| The basic principle of self-testing has been used before for other non-invasive tests, such as in pregnancy tests. Clients can access test kits [for HIV] from pharmacies and other approved suppliers. Self-testing is different from the traditional HTC strategies as the client does not receive basic education, or pre-test counselling. But in order to strengthen support systems for self-testing, there is a need for basic standards. These standards include: |
| Test kits must be evaluated and approved for use in Kenya; |
| Test kits must be used before the expiry date; |
| Storage conditions must be adequate; |
| Test kits must pass quality control standards in Kenya; |
| Pharmacists must be trained and approved to dispense, counsel and demonstrate the use of the test kit to clients and patients as the need arises; |
| Follow-up and referral services, including confirming positive test results, must be accessible for clients. |
| The vendor should be able to provide the client with step-by-step instructions for |
| 1. How to conduct the test; |
| 2. How to correctly interpret the test results; and |
| 3. Where to access follow-up and support services in the surrounding area. |
| Persons must also be informed that the results are not confirmed until a second, confirmatory test is conducted. This information should also be made available on a package insert, to be included on all HIV tests sold or distributed in Kenya, along with the minimum standards mentioned above. |
| Pharmacists and other suppliers of self-test materials should undergo HTC training and be certified by the Ministry of Health. They must provide a private room for clients who may need further information, counselling and social support. Utmost care should be taken to avoid cases of misuse of test kits, as well as to prevent negative social outcomes. |
Source: Ministry of Public Health and Sanitation of Kenya [27].
Abbreviations: HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; HTC, HIV testing and counseling.
Summary of Research Findings on HIV Self-Testing
| Study | Location | Study Design and Population | Interested in Self-Testing | Ever Informally Self-Tested | Confirmation/ Disclosure of Self-Test Results | Accuracy of Self-Test | Additional Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kenya | Cross-sectional survey and focus group discussions among doctors, clinical officers, pharmacists, laboratory technologists, and VCT counselors in all 8 provinces of Kenya | 73% | FGD indicate many have self-tested. | 64% of health workers had ever tested for HIV, but only 43% had tested in the past year and <50% of partners had ever tested. | |||
| Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Zimbabwe | Situational analysis among a range of disciplines from front-line health providers to support service employees | 79% | 31% | 85% disclosed to at least 1 person, 46% sought confirmatory testing. | 70% of health workers had ever tested for HIV. 31% had already self-tested informally. | ||
| Kenya | Focus group discussions and in-depth interviews among doctors, clinical officers, pharmacists, laboratory technologists, and VCT counselors | FGD indicate many welcomed self-testing. | FGD indicate already common. | FGD indicate disclosure is important. | Many health workers avoid conventional testing services due to fear of stigma, and there would be a great demand for self-testing if made available. Many health workers have already self-tested, but expressed a need for adequate counseling and referral services. | ||
| Zambia | Cross-sectional survey, focus group discussions and in-depth interviews among physicians, clinical officers, nurses, midwives, and pharmacy staff | FGD indicate some have self-tested. | |||||
| United States | Cross-sectional survey among clients at 2 stationary and 2 mobile public HIV testing facilities; 49% MSM | 24% selected as preferred method. | |||||
| United States | Cross-sectional state-representative survey | 37% would self-test. | |||||
| United States | Cross-sectional survey among at-risk participants from a needle exchange, 2 bathhouses, and 1 sex venue for MSM, and an STI clinic | 20% selected as preferred method. | |||||
| Singapore | Cross-sectional survey among known HIV-positive, and high-risk individuals of unknown status clients of 2 HIV testing centers | 89% would prefer self-testing, 88% thought self-testing should be made available over-the-counter. | Using Determine finger-prick rapid HIV test there were 56% invalid results. | 89% of participants preferred self-testing but thought confidential counseling was necessary. | |||
| United States | Evaluation of interest and feasibility in self-testing through 7 waves of self-testing by HIV-positive individuals, with instructions for use modified after feedback form each wave | 61% would have preferred to test at home. | Invalid and false-negative results were 9% and 5% with finger-stick and 6% with past-generation oral fluid, respectively. | ||||
| United States | Evaluation of acceptability and accuracy of self-testing by patients from 2 urban emergency departments without HIV diagnosis | 85% agreed to self-test, of those, 91% agreed to oral self-testing over blood-based. | Self-test results 99.6% concordant with health worker using new-generation oral fluid test. | 96% reported oral test “not hard at all to perform correctly,” 94% believed results to be “definitely correct,” 91% trusted self-test result, 98% would recommend to a friend. | |||
| South Africa | Pilot research from a nationwide program among the general population from KwaZulu-Natal | Enthusiastic support from both community and healthcare leaders | |||||
| United States | Computer-assisted counseling and rapid HIV testing among staff from chemical dependency treatment centres | Staff thought their clients would be interested in computer-assisted counseling and in self-testing, and thought self-testing would empower their clients. | |||||
| India | Acceptability and feasibility of computer-assisted HIV self-testing among Internet center staff and potential participants (single women, single men, married women, married men, couples) | Participants asked if they wanted computer counseling and rapid self-testing program in Internet kiosks: on a scale of 1–10, the mean score was 9.8 (mode 10); 86% would rather test themselves than have staff test them. | |||||
| Germany, Netherlands, United Kingdom, Belgium, Austria, Switzerland | Evaluation of motivation for and experience with home testing among a general population of people in Europe, aged 13–76 y (50% reporting unprotected sex and large proportion of MSM) | Only 67% of self-testers reported they would have had an HIV test were a home self-test unavailable. | 98% reported they would go to a doctor if they tested positive, 23% conducted the self-test with another person present. | ||||
| Netherlands | Annual report of Checkpoint HIV testing facility for the general population | 40/4400 opted for self-testing, but only 1% knew that self-testing was an option prior to arrival at facilities. | Of 40 clients, 13 returned to facility within 1 mo, 16 returned 1–24 mo later, 10 returned >24 mo after self-test. | ||||
| Kenya | Pilot study of feasibility and acceptability of self-testing among healthcare workers at 7 hospitals | 53% accepted self-test kit, most tested within a week. | The majority preferred to confirm results at a VCT center, though some confirmed by self-test. | Self-testing was found to be acceptable and convenient. Few people used the telephone hotline. | |||
| Malawi | Mixed quantitative and qualitative study of supervised self-testing among residents in high-density community residents and peer group members. | 92% opted for self-testing over standard HIV testing and counseling, 100% would recommend self-testing, 95% “very likely” to self-test in the future. | 99.2% concordant with health worker using new-generation oral fluid test. | 96% reported the test was “not hard to do.” Self-testing was considered likely to increase uptake and frequency of HIV testing. | |||
| Malawi | Mixed-methods study to explore enablers and barriers to HIV testing among healthcare workers at facilities in 2 districts of Malawi | 11% | Most would prefer to test themselves than have a “junior” test them. | ||||
| Netherlands | Cross-sectional survey among those who have and have not taken a self-test, to identify determinants of self-testing | 19 HIV self-testers had known results: 1 HIV+ sought medical consult; 18 HIV–: 72% no further action, 16% consulted with family/friends, 11% changed lifestyle, 6% sought more information. | HIV self-testing was associated with perceived susceptibility, perceived benefits, self-efficacy, experience of bodily or environmental event(s) that trigger action, belief that individuals or groups support self-testing (subjective norm) | ||||
| United States | Cross-sectional survey among MSM to describe factors associated with willingness to take a free self-test | 63% reported being very likely and 20% somewhat likely to self-test. | The hypothetical offer of incentives of $10, $20, or $50 approximately doubled reported willingness to self-test. Black MSM, those having unprotected anal sex in past 12 mo, and those unaware of their HIV status were more likely to be willing to self-test. | ||||
| United Kingdom | Cross-sectional survey of men 18–35 y to assess acceptability of self-testing for STI/HIV | 91% would be willing to self-test. | Primary care settings (80%), sexual health clinics (67%), and pharmacies (65%) were most acceptable locations for self-test kit pickup. | ||||
| United States | Qualitative study to describe ease of use and acceptability of oral HIV self-testing among MSM | 84% reported availability of self-testing would increase frequency of testing. | Of 69 online surveys completed, 2 reported invalid results and 1 was incorrectly performed. | 46% reported they would pay ≤$20 for self-test, 26% would pay $20–$40, 17% would pay ≥$40. 11% would only use if free. 86% expected to test ≥4 times/year if kits cost $5 compared to 26% if kits cost $50. | |||
| United States | Mixed quantitative and qualitative study to determine whether HIV-negative MSM would use self-testing as a harm reduction strategy to screen sexual partners | 87% reported they would likely self-test if OTC testing became available, and 80% would likely test a sexual partner at home. 74% chose to take the test in front of an interviewer. | Most participants took the test without mistake. The most common mistake was touching the pad of the testing wand with their fingers. | Reported barriers to testing with a partner included being impractical or killing the mood, and when under the influence of alcohol/drugs; although it was thought some partners might refuse, a violent reaction or unmanageable situation was not anticipated from bringing up self-testing. | |||
| France | Cross-sectional survey among MSM to assess access and use of unregulated self-test kits available online | 30% were aware of online self-test kits. Of those aware and not already HIV-positive, 3.5% had accessed an unregulated kit. | Of 3 men who tested positive by self-test, 2 had sought confirmatory testing and 1 called an HIV hotline. |
Abbreviations: FGD, focus group discussion; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; MSM, men who have sex with men; OTC, over-the-counter; STI, sexually transmitted infection; VCT, voluntary counseling and testing.
Identified Gaps in Research on HIV Self-Testing
| Gaps | Comments | Recommendations | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Effect of self-testing on levels of uptake of first, repeat, and recent HIV testing | Evidence from studies from many countries that self-testing is highly acceptable. Evidence that there are already high levels of self-testing in African health workers. Unregulated self-test kits are widely available on the Internet, indicating a market for self-testing. Current indications suggest self-testing may be mainly used for the first test, and then by frequent repeaters. | Evaluation of uptake of ever-testing and recent testing should be assessed before implementation of self-testing programs and then monitored at workforce level. |
| 2 | Secondary beneficial effects of self-testing | Potential for personal empowerment, diminished HIV stigma associated with knowing one's status needs evaluation. | Qualitative research in representative and pilot sites would allow this to be assessed. |
| 3 | Secondary harmful effects of self-testing | Potential for greater psychological trauma compared to counselor-provided testing, and greater likelihood of inaccurate results from user error needs evaluation and failure to confirm result. | System for reporting serious adverse outcomes should be considered in representative or pilot sites. |
| 4 | Couples testing | There are currently no data on the acceptability and impact of couples self-testing. Ongoing study in Kenyan Health Workers considers this. | Operational research on couples self-testing is need to explore this potential approach. |
| 5 | Training, information, and counseling needed to ensure accuracy and minimize potential harm | Defining the essential components and how to provide them in ways that are effective but do not represent a disincentive will be an important part of operationalizing self-testing programs. | In practice will vary according to distribution strategy and population. |
| 6 | Quality assurance | Some studies have demonstrated a lower sensitivity with oral HIV testing as compared to blood-based testing. Current approach recommends confirmatory testing, but the acceptability of this and need for confirmation of negative results is not known. | Finger prick–based self-testing may be a consideration for future research. Current recommendations regarding confirmation of results should remain in place. Confirmation for repeat tests with no change in result may be less imperative. |
| 7 | Entry into HIV prevention/care services | Only assessed in participants in the USA Home Access service: qualitative research suggests high ability/willingness to accept results and seek entry into care once positive status is known. Other studies suggest that entry into care is lower with community-based testing as compared to clinic-based testing. Some reasons for this may be compounded with home self-testing. | Self-referral into prevention and/or care services should be promoted, with confirmatory testing at this point. Additional data are required to inform linkage to care, and how best to promote this within the context of self-testing. |
| 8 | Cost-effectiveness | Important to determine relative to other options once models are established. | Costs and cost-effectiveness studies are required. |
| 9 | Effect of cost on demand | Few data exist to determine acceptable costs for test kits, including for populations at highest risk, and who are unlikely to test through current testing strategies. | The most acceptable price or price range will vary by country and by populations within a given country. Topic for research |
| 10 | Marketing and distribution of self-testing | No data on what marketing or distribution strategies will attract populations at highest risk, and those who are unlikely to test through current testing strategies. | Topic for research |
| 11 | Systems for monitoring and tracking self-testing | Few data exist on optimal monitoring systems by which we can track who received a test, got results, made the linkage to prevention or care services, etc. Unique challenges for monitoring recruitment and retention at each step in the testing and treatment cascade for those testing without initial contact with a health provider. | The use of mHealth technologies should be explored to track self-testing and linkage to care. |
Abbreviation: HIV, human immunodeficiency virus.