| Literature DB >> 28079591 |
Paul K Drain1, Christine Rousseau.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: More point-of-care (POC) diagnostic tests are becoming available for HIV diagnosis and treatment in resource-limited settings. These novel technologies have the potential to foster decentralized HIV care and treatment for the benefit of clinical laboratories, HIV clinics, and HIV-infected patients. There continue to be many business, technological, and operational challenges that limit product development and regulatory approval, which limits products available for the required operational and cost-effectiveness studies and delays policy adoption and implementation. RECENTEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28079591 PMCID: PMC5287256 DOI: 10.1097/COH.0000000000000351
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Opin HIV AIDS ISSN: 1746-630X Impact factor: 4.283
FIGURE 1Conceptual model of the Simplified HIV TREtment And Monitoring) study.
FIGURE 2WHO's diagnostic pyramid for HIV testing. ∗Adopted from Ref. [8].
Existing rapid HIV diagnostic tests for self-testing available on the market
| Assay (manufacturer) | Specimen | Sens./Spec. | Approval status | Price per test |
| Autotest VIH (AAZ Labs; Rungis-Cedex, France) | Fingerstick whole blood | 100%/99.8% | CE marked; WHO PQ submitted | US$25–28 |
| BioSURE HIV Self Test (BioSURE; London, United Kingdom) | Fingerstick whole blood | 99.7%/99.9% | CE marked | US$7.5–15 |
| INSTI HIV Self Test (bioLytical Laboratories; Richmond, British Columbia, Canada) | Fingerstick whole blood | 100%/99.8% | CE marked | 36 |
| OraQuick In-Home HIV Test (OraSure Technologies Inc.; Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, USA) | Oral fluid | 100%/99.8% | Pending CE certificate | N/A |
Adopted from Ref. [38].