| Literature DB >> 25510889 |
Kevin Pottie1, Olanrewaju Medu2, Vivian Welch3, Govinda P Dahal4, Mark Tyndall5, Tamara Rader6, George Wells7.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the effects of rapid voluntary counselling and testing (VCT) for HIV on HIV incidence and uptake of HIV/AIDS services in people at high risk for HIV exposure.Entities:
Keywords: HIV Services; HIV Testing; Rapid VCT
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25510889 PMCID: PMC4267075 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-006859
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Selection of studies for inclusion in the review (RCT, randomised controlled trial).
Risk of bias as assessed using the Cochrane risk of bias tool
| Study | Random sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) | Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) | Incomplete outcome date (attrition bias) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anaya | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk |
| Coates | Low risk | High risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk |
| Lugada | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk |
| Malonza | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk |
| Read | Low risk | High risk | High risk | Unclear risk | Low risk |
| Spielberg | Low risk | High risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk |
| Sweat | Low risk | High risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk |
| Walensky | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Low risk |
Characteristics of included studies—randomised controlled trials
| Study | Study method | Participants | Country | Intervention arm | Control arm | Target period (if applicable) | Outcome measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anaya | Randomised controlled trail | Age: 18–65 years | USA |
Nurse initiated streamlined VCT with rapid testing: 84 participants Nurse initiated traditional VCT: 84 participants | Conventional VCT: 83 participants | Testing rates | |
| Coates | Cluster randomised controlled trial | Age: 16–32 years | Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Thailand, and South Africa | Community-based rapid VCT: 63 000 participants | Conventional VCT: 52 900 participants | 36 months | HIV incidence |
| Lugada | Cluster randomised controlled trial | Age: 15–49 years | Uganda | Home-based rapid VCT with ART programme: 4798 participants | Conventional clinic-based ART programme: 2386 participants | 2 years | Uptake of testing; HIV prevalence |
| Malonza | Randomised controlled trail | Age: 18–44 years | Kenya | Rapid VCT in health facility: 627 participants | Conventional HIV testing (ELISA) test: 622 participants | 1 year | Wait period for tests; receipt of test results; uptake into antiretroviral treatment programmes |
| Read | Randomised controlled trial | Age: | Australia | Rapid VCT | Conventional VCT | 18 months | Incidence of HIV testing, including testing outside study clinic |
| Spielberg | Cluster randomised trial | Age: 14 years and older | USA |
Rapid testing with standard counselling: 3965 Oral fluid testing with standard counselling: 4185 |
Traditional testing with standard counselling: 4364 Traditional testing with option of counselling: 4496 | 221 days | Uptake of HIV testing; receipt of test results |
| Sweat | Cluster randomised controlled trial | Age: 16–32 years | Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Thailand | Community-based rapid VCT: 28 240 participants | Conventional VCT: 28 916 participants | 3 years | HIV prevalence; uptake of HIV testing, repeat testing |
| Walensky | Prospective randomised controlled trial | Age: mean=37.1 years | USA | Counsellor facilitated rapid VCT in emergency department: 2446 participants | Convention HIV testing in emergency department 2409 participants | 18 months | Overall testing: offer, acceptance |
*Jinja, Kamuli, Iganga, Mayuge and Mukuno. ART, antiretroviral therapy; VCT, voluntary counselling and testing.
GRADE evidence profile and summary of findings for use of rapid approaches for improving health outcomes
| Outcomes | Effects of rapid testing approaches on HIV outcomes | Relative effect (95% CI) | Anticipated absolute effect with control | Risk difference with intervention | Number of participants (studies) | Quality of the evidence (GRADE) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Three RCTs included in the analysis provided consistent point estimates showing uptake of testing was significantly better among participants randomised to rapid testing approaches | RR=2.95 (1.69 to 5.16) | 145 more per 1000 | 282 cases more per 1000 (100–602) | 80 400 (4 studies) | ⊕⊕⊕⊝ | |
| Two RCTs reported rapid approaches resulted in higher receipt of HIV test results. However due to the heterogeneity-variations in population characteristics, the pooled estimates were not statistically significant | RR=2.14 | 213 more per 1000 | 243 cases per 1000 (17–691) | 18 426 (3 studies) | ⊕⊕⊕⊝ | |
| One large Cluster RCT found a very large effect for this outcome with participants randomised to rapid testing approaches twice more likely to have repeat HIV tests | RR=2.28 (0.35 to 15.07) | 97 more per 1000 | 124 cases per 1000 (63 fewer–1000 more) | 10 706 (1 study) | ⊕⊕⊕⊝ | |
| HIV incidence did decrease in intervention clusters compared with control clusters, but this effect was not statistically significant | RR=0.89 (0.63 to 1.24) | 81 more per 1000 | 9 cases per 1000 (30 fewer–19 more) | 115 300 | ⊕⊕⊝ |
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence.
High quality: Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect.
Moderate quality: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate.
Low quality: Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate.
Very low quality: We are very uncertain about the estimate.
*Adjusted sample size after applying the intracluster correlation coefficient.
†Outcome of HIV incidence was downgraded because allocation concealment was unclear, blinding of intervention not possible and inability to determine blinding of researchers.
‡Outcome of HIV incidence was downgraded because allocation concealment was unclear, blinding of intervention not possible and inability to determine blinding of researchers and imprecision of estimates.
§Number of participants included in the analysis is not available from the abstracts.
RCT, randomised controlled trial; RR, relative risk.
Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale—Observational Study Star Template
| Study | Selection | Comparability | Outcome/exposure |
|---|---|---|---|
| Appiah | ***/**** | */** | **/*** |
| Huebner | ***/**** | */** | **/*** |
| Liang | ***/**** | */** | **/*** |
| Shrestha | ***/**** | */** | **/*** |
| White | ****/**** | */** | **/*** |
Selection—maximum of 4 stars (representativeness of exposed cohort; selection of non-exposed cohort; and exposure).
Comparability—maximum of 2 stars (comparability between cohorts).
Outcome/ Exposure—maximum of 3 stars (adequacy of outcome, follow-up duration).
Adapted from Wells et al.47 Available at http://www.evidencebasedpublichealth.de.
Characteristics of included studies—observational studies
| Authors | Study method | Participants | Country | Intervention arm | Control arm | Target period (if applicable) | Outcome measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Appiah | Cross-sectional observational study | Tuberculosis clinic patients and VCT clients | Ghana | Tuberculosis clinic-based testing | VCT clinic-based testing | 1–6 months | Uptake of testing and results |
| Huebner | Controlled before and after studies | Bathhouse patrons | USA | Rapid VCT | Conventional VCT | 11–13 months | Uptake of testing; receipt of test results |
| Liang | Prospective cohort study | Men who have sex with men, injection drug users and commercial sex workers | USA | Rapid HIV testing | Traditional serum-based HIV testing | 9 months | Uptake of testing; HIV prevalence; post-test counselling |
| Shrestha | Cohort study | High-risk members of the population | USA | Outreach-based HIV testing | Clinic-based HIV testing | 23 months | Cost per notification |
| White | Retrospective cohort study | Emergency department patients | USA | Point-of-care HIV testing | Laboratory-based HIV testing | 6 months | HIV-testing rates |
VCT, voluntary counselling and testing.
Figure 2Forest plot of rapid HIV voluntary counselling and testing versus conventional care (A) on uptake of HIV testing and (B) on receipt of HIV results
Figure 3Forest plot of effect of rapid voluntary counselling and testing testing approaches versus conventional care on repeat testing.
Figure 4Forest plot of effect of rapid voluntary counselling and testing versus convention testing on HIV incidence.