| Literature DB >> 28691435 |
Sarah E Rutstein1,2, Jintanat Ananworanich3,4, Sarah Fidler5, Cheryl Johnson6,7, Eduard J Sanders8,9,10, Omar Sued11, Asier Saez-Cirion12, Christopher D Pilcher13, Christophe Fraser14, Myron S Cohen2,15, Marco Vitoria6, Meg Doherty6, Joseph D Tucker2,15,16.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The unchanged global HIV incidence may be related to ignoring acute HIV infection (AHI). This scoping review examines diagnostic, clinical, and public health implications of identifying and treating persons with AHI.Entities:
Keywords: acute HIV infection; antiretroviral therapy; diagnostics; early HIV; guidelines; low- and middle-income countries; primary HIV
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28691435 PMCID: PMC5515019 DOI: 10.7448/IAS.20.1.21579
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
Variability in estimated HIV-1 transmission risk during AHI vs. chronic infection as evaluated using Rakai-based HIV-discordant couple cohort
| Author, year | AHI definition (months) | Analytic methods | Assumptions | Outcomes: Increased infectiousness, AHI vs. chronic infection |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wawer et al.[ | 0–5 | Estimated per coital transmission rates by index partner infection stage | Relied on self-reported coital frequency Stages of infectivity defined by 10-month interval observation periods | 12-fold |
| Hollingsworth et al.[ | 0–3 | Probabilistic model estimated transmission hazards by infection stage | Adjusted duration of infectious stages based on predicted infectiousness Transmission hazard as a function of time since partnership formed (i.e. not transmissions/reported coital acts) | 26-fold |
| Bellan et al.[ | 0–1.7 | Simulated cohort model, fitting Rakai-population transmission events based on transmission hazard and AHI duration using Bayesian methods | Used observed VL trajectories and predicted VL-infectivity relationship to estimate infectiousness Adjusted for heterogeneity of infectiousness and susceptibility Modified original analyses’ exclusion criteria to include previously censored couplesa | 5-fold |
aOriginal cohort censorship of serodiscordant couples based on single study visits prior to (a) being lost to follow-up, (b) couple dissolution, or (c) study termination.
AHI – acute HIV infection; VL – viral load.
HIV diagnostics in the context of AHI
| Test | Advantages | Disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3rd generation antibody (POC) | ASSURED criteria: Affordable, sensitive, specific, user-friendly, rapid & robust, equipment free, delivered | Misses earliest phase of infection | 1.5 |
| 4th generation antibody/antigen (EIA) | Detects infection earlier with p24 antigen sensitivity | Requires skilled personnel for specimen collection/laboratory processing Does not discriminate between antigen and antibody assay targets (i.e., acute and established HIV) without modified signal-to-cutoff ratiosŦ
Delayed result delivery increases risk of loss-to-follow-up Misses pre-p24 “eclipse” period May be prohibitively expensive for LMIC | 5 |
| 4th generation (POC) | ASSURED criteria: Affordable, sensitive, specific, user-friendly, rapid & robust, equipment free, delivered Narrows window period for AHI diagnosis vs. 3rd generation | Poor field-performance to-date Misses pre-p24 “eclipse” period | Not available |
| Nucleic acid amplification testing (NAT) technologiesa | Highly sensitive, capable of diagnosing shortly after acquisition Pooling may decrease per-test costs in appropriate ratios | Requires skilled personnel for specimen collection/laboratory processing May be prohibitively expensive for LMIC; trade-off of increasing complexity with decreasing cost for pooling strategies Delayed result delivery increases risk of loss-to-follow-up | 8–10 |
| NAT technology (POC) | ASSURED criteria: Affordable, sensitive, specific, user-friendly, rapid & robust, equipment free, delivered Highly sensitive, capable of diagnosing shortly after acquisition | Early in development – in need of additional field testing Concern for throughput feasibility with current technologies Unknown cost | 17–25 |
awith and without pooling;
ŦRamos et al. propose a modified testing algorithm through which reduced signal-to-cutoff ratios would trigger confirmatory Multispot and NAT testing to increase sensitivity of 4th generation testing in detecting AHI. This ratio is determined using the signal strength of a sample compared to the signal strength of an internal cutoff with ratios ≥1.0 defined as positive by the manufacturer; LMIC – low- and middle-income countries; NAT – nucleic acid amplification testing; POC – point-of-care.
bData from Cheryl Johnson, co-author.
Figure 1.Algorithm for targeting acute HIV screening resources using clinical risk score.
Figure 2.Projected viral load, CD4 cell count, reservoir seeding, and symptom duration comparing untreated vs. treated acute HIV infection.