| Literature DB >> 31597939 |
Martin Hoenigl1, Kushagra Mathur2, Jill Blumenthal3, Jesse Brennan4, Miriam Zuazo3, Melanie McCauley3, Lucy E Horton3, Gabriel A Wagner3, Sharon L Reed5, Gary M Vilke4, Christopher J Coyne4, Susan J Little3.
Abstract
Universal HIV and HCV screening in emergency departments (ED) can reach populations who are less likely to get tested otherwise. The objective of this analysis was to evaluate universal opt-out HIV and HCV screening in two EDs in San Diego. HIV screening for persons aged 13-64 years (excluding persons known to be HIV+ or reporting HIV testing within last 12 months) was implemented using a 4th generation HIV antigen/antibody assay; HCV screening was offered to persons born between 1945 and 1965. Over a period of 16 months, 12,575 individuals were tested for HIV, resulting in 33 (0.26%) new HIV diagnoses, of whom 30 (90%) were successfully linked to care. Universal screening also identified 74 out-of-care for >12-months HIV+ individuals of whom 50 (68%) were successfully relinked to care. Over a one-month period, HCV antibody tests were conducted in 905 individuals with a seropositivity rate of 9.9% (90/905); 61 seropositives who were newly identified or never treated for HCV had HCV RNA testing, of which 31 (51%) resulted positive (3.4% of all participants, including 18 newly identified RNA positives representing 2% of all participants), and 13/31 individuals (42%) were linked to care. The rate of newly diagnosed HCV infections exceeded the rate of newly diagnosed HIV infections by >7-fold, underlining the importance of HCV screening in EDs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31597939 PMCID: PMC6785532 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-51128-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Flow diagram of testing algorithm (blue) and Case Management flow (brown). New HIV positives were identified only via testing, while known HIV positives were identified via testing and also question 1 of the automated EMR algorithm.
Figure 2Number of HIV tests per week (number of tests Y-axis, week on X-axis) in the two participating Emergency Departments. Blue rectangle indicates the time period the HCV pilot was conducted. Arrow indicates the time when the opting-out discussion was moved from the nursing triage to the blood draw.
Demographic characteristics of individuals with: newly diagnosed HIV infection, out-of-care known HIV positives, newly diagnosed with HCV infection, and known HCV RNA positives who were never treated for HCV.
| Demographics | New HIV Diagnoses (33) | Out-of-care >12 months Known HIV positives (74) | New HCV Diagnoses (18) | Known HCV RNA positives never treated (13) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (median, IQR) | 37 (28–48) | 41 (32–51) | 62 (60–64) | 61 (55–63) |
| Male | 24 (73%) | 62 (84%) | 14 (78%) | 10 (77%) |
| Female | 8 (24%) | 12 (16%) | 4 (22%) | 3 (23%) |
| Transfemale | 1 (3%) | 3 (4%) | 0 | 0 |
| White | 15 (45%) | 33(45%) | 10 (56%) | 8 (62%) |
| Black | 7 (21%) | 20 (27%) | 5 (28%) | 2 (15%) |
| Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander | 0 | 2 (3%) | 0 | 0 |
| Asian | 1 (3%) | 0 | 0 | 1 (8%) |
| Bi-racial | 10 (30%) | 19 (26%) | 3 (17%) | 2 (15%) |
| Hispanic Ethnicity | 13 (39%) | 23 (27%) | 3 (17%) | 2 (15%) |
| Men who have sex with men | 18 (55%) | 40 (54%) | NA | NA |
| Heterosexual contact | 12 (36%) | 19 (26%) | NA | NA |
| Injection Drug Used | 1 (3%) | 3 (4%) | NA | NA |
| Other/unknown | 2 (6%) | 12 (16%) | NA | NA |
| HCV/HIV co-infection | 0 | 5 (7%) | 0 | 0 |
Yield of HIV and HCV screening programs broken down by the two participating Emergency Departments (EDs).
| Hillcrest ED | La Jolla ED | |
|---|---|---|
| # HIV Tests Conducted | 7702 (52%) | 7057 (48%) |
| New HIV Diagnoses | 29 (88%) | 4 (12%) |
| Known HIV positives >12 months out of care identified | 71 (96%) | 3 (4%) |
| # HCV Tests Conducted | 489 (50%) | 481 (50%) |
| New HCV Diagnoses | 15 (83%) | 3 (17%) |
| Known HCV RNA positives never treated | 11 (85%) | 2 (15%) |